12
. c:uo:) p.:t( • p"' 1-J\. 'Bt.BL.Ci d.C.BU)i 'f v12q8d TRINITY REPORTER VOLUME 8 NUMBER 1 "MOTION IN THE ARTS" was the title of a dance course offered as part of the "Trinity Alive" program this summer. Margaret Rubino '78, Renez Greene '78, and Emily Twadell '77 are reflected in the windows of the Albert C. Jacobs Life Sciences Center. (Photo by John Long, The Hartford Courant) Summer Arts Festival Has Successful Debut 'Trinity Alive," the College's summer arts festival, concluded its inaugural season on July 30. The seven week program, which encompassed theatre, dance, film, art exhibits, free concerts and credit and non-credit courses, generated tremendous en- thusiasm in the greater Hartford community as well. as on the campus itself. The festival's centerpiece was Summerstage, which attracted almost 10,000 people to the Goodwin Theatre. The Summerstage company, composed of professional and student actors, performed Anthony Shaffer's "Sleuth," Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night," and Preston Jones' "The Oldest Living Graduate ." Particularly well received were three plays for children by the Traveling Playhouse· of ·New York, which were sold out for every per- formance. Dance was a major component of "Trinity Alive." Assistant Professor of Dance Judy Dworin headed a staff which included guest artists in T ai Chi and English country dancing. Credit and non-credit courses for amateurs were supplemented by performances by professional companies such as the Hartford Ballet and the Dance Alliance. For the last 28 years, summer at Trinity has meant Wednesday evening carillon concerts. The warm weather and general atmosphere of excitement on the campus drew record crowds to the quadrangle for eleven successive weeks. The Chapel was also the site of four chamber music concerts and the premier performance in this country of the St. Hallvard Boys' Choir of Oslo, Norway. College Awarded $250,000 By Kresge Foundation The Kresge Foundation of Troy, Michigan has awarded Trinity a $250,000 challenge grant toward the building expansion of the College Library. The gift, which will be credited . toward the $12 million Campaign for Trinity Values, is one of the largest received thus far by the College for the Library project. The Kresge Foundation was created through the gifts of the late Sebastian S. Kresge, founder of the S.S. Kresge Company, now known as K mart Corporation. During the last 54 years, the Kresge Foundation has made appropriations of more than $283 million to institutions in the fields of higher education, health services, the art _ s, social welfare, and the care of the young and aging. Construction and major renovation of facilities are the Foundation's primary concerns, and grants are usually made on a challenge basis to encourage further fund-raising efforts. The Library addition will provide 250 seating spaces, shelving for 250,000 volumes, and 2,650 square feet of work space. Construction is ex- pected to begin in the fall, and is estimated to cost $3,000,000. The Kresge Foundation conditioned the grant on Trinity's obtaining the balance of the funds by September 15, 1978. President Lockwood expressed optimism in the College's ability to meet this challenge. TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT SEPTEMBER, 1977 1 OOth Anniversary Of Trinity Football The opening of the football season on September 24 will begin the celebration of the lOOth anniversary of Trinity College football. One hundred years ago, in the Fall of 1877, Trinity sent its first intercollegiate football squad against Yale University for its only game. The legendary Walter Camp was a member of that Yale team which beat the Bantam eleven despite being surprised and confused by the tight canvas jerseys greased with lard which the Trinity men wore. The Ivy Leaguers were able to tackle the slippery Bantams well enough to prevent any scores while they produced 13 touchdowns and seven goals (points after). Yale proved to be an always tough opponent for the Trinity gridders. The Elis defeated the Bantams 18 straight times from 1877 to 1917, and there was a zero 'iinder Trinity on the scoreboard at the end of every one of those games. The early years were rough for Trinity football. As the College moved to its present site there was much student disapproval, and interest in athletics diminished; there was no varsity football team from 1879 through 1883. Trinity did not win a football game until it defeated the Amherst Aggies (now the University of Massachusetts) 32-4 in 1887, the sixth football season in Trinity history. Twenty years later the Bantams won by their biggest margin ever with a 94-0 victory over the College of New York. Trinity produced its first undefeated football team in 1911 with a record of six wins, zero losses, and two ties. The 1915 squad was also undefeated with a 5-0-2 record. In 1932 Daniel E. Jessee became head coach of the Bantams and this began an important era in Trinity football. From 1932 through 1966, the 32 squads that Jessee coached won 150 games, while losing only 76 and tieing seven. Only seven of the 32 teams had season records under the .500 mark, while four teams (1934, 1949, 1954, 1955) produced undefeated and untied records. Trinity made the national record books in 1969 with a game against Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The final score, 43-43, stands as the highest tie score in the entire history of American intercollegiate football. The first 100 years of Trinity College football have been interesting and enjoyable. There have been 92 seasons and 648 games played in the hundred year period. Twenty-five coaches have directed Bantam teams to 335 wins, 273 losses, and 40 ties against op- ponents ranging from Ivy League schools to New York Agricultural College and the Waterbury YMCA, Army, the traditional Little Three rivals and many other institutions, large and small. The game, the College, and the competition have changed since 1877, but , as Trinity enters its second hundred years of football competition, the one thing that remains the same is the Trinity athlete. A scholar first, an athlete second, the Trinity football player lives in an environment which is not a stepping stone to professional sports . The "fun element" of athletic competition is vivid at Trinity, as it has been in the past, and will be in the future. The 1977 season will provide a fine setting for celebrating Trinity's football history. The four nome -games will showcase fine football competition against Bowdoin, and traditional rivals Williams, Coast Guard, and Wesleyan. Three Named Full Professors The College has announced the promotion of three members of the faculty to the rank of full professor. They are: Thomas Baird, professor of fine arts, part-time; Donald B. Galbraith, professor of biology; and Stephen Minot, professor of English, part-time. Baird received the B.A. and the M.F.A. from Princeton. He has studied French 17th Century theatre design as a Fulbright Fellow in Paris. Prior to joining Trinity in 1970 he was associate director of Harvard University's (continued page 2)

1977September

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Page 1: 1977September

~.0 190 . c:uo:) • p.:t( J.~vr·:,B.

• p"' 'f;~. 1-J\. 'Bt.BL.Ci

d.C.BU)i 'f v12q8d

TRINITY REPORTER VOLUME 8 NUMBER 1

"MOTION IN THE ARTS" was the title of a dance course offered as part of the "Trinity Alive" program this summer. Margaret Rubino '78, Renez Greene '78, and Emily Twadell '77 are reflected in the windows of the Albert C. Jacobs Life Sciences Center. (Photo by John Long, The Hartford Courant)

Summer Arts Festival Has Successful Debut

'Trinity Alive," the College's summer arts festival, concluded its inaugural season on July 30. The seven week program, which encompassed theatre, dance, film, art exhibits, free concerts and credit and non-credit courses, generated tremendous en­thusiasm in the greater Hartford community as well . as on the campus itself.

The festival's centerpiece was Summerstage, which attracted almost 10,000 people to the Goodwin Theatre. The Summerstage company, composed of professional and student actors, performed Anthony Shaffer's "Sleuth," Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night," and Preston Jones' "The Oldest Living Graduate." Particularly well received were three plays for children by the Traveling Playhouse· of ·New York, which were sold out for every per-

formance. Dance was a major component of

"Trinity Alive." Assistant Professor of Dance Judy Dworin headed a staff which included guest artists in T ai Chi and English country dancing. Credit and non-credit courses for amateurs were supplemented by performances by professional companies such as the Hartford Ballet and the Dance Alliance.

For the last 28 years, summer at Trinity has meant Wednesday evening carillon concerts. The warm weather and general atmosphere of excitement on the campus drew record crowds to the quadrangle for eleven successive weeks. The Chapel was also the site of four chamber music concerts and the premier performance in this country of the St. Hallvard Boys' Choir of Oslo, Norway.

College Awarded $250,000 By Kresge Foundation

The Kresge Foundation of Troy, Michigan has awarded Trinity a $250,000 challenge grant toward the building expansion of the College Library. The gift, which will be credited . toward the $12 million Campaign for Trinity Values, is one of the largest received thus far by the College for the Library project.

The Kresge Foundation was created through the gifts of the late Sebastian S. Kresge, founder of the S.S. Kresge Company, now known as K mart Corporation. During the last 54 years, the Kresge Foundation has made appropriations of more than $283 million to institutions in the fields of higher education, health services, the art_s, social welfare, and the care of the

young and aging. Construction and major renovation of facilities are the Foundation's primary concerns, and grants are usually made on a challenge basis to encourage further fund-raising efforts.

The Library addition will provide 250 seating spaces, shelving for 250,000 volumes, and 2,650 square feet of work space. Construction is ex­pected to begin in the fall, and is estimated to cost $3,000,000. The Kresge Foundation conditioned the grant on Trinity's obtaining the balance of the funds by September 15, 1978. President Lockwood expressed optimism in the College's ability to meet this challenge.

TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT SEPTEMBER, 1977

1 OOth Anniversary Of Trinity Football

The opening of the football season on September 24 will begin the celebration of the lOOth anniversary of Trinity College football. One hundred years ago, in the Fall of 1877, Trinity sent its first intercollegiate football squad against Yale University for its only game. The legendary Walter Camp was a member of that Yale team which beat the Bantam eleven despite being surprised and confused by the tight canvas jerseys greased with lard which the Trinity men wore. The Ivy Leaguers were able to tackle the slippery Bantams well enough to prevent any scores while they produced 13 touchdowns and seven goals (points after) .

Yale proved to be an always tough opponent for the Trinity gridders. The Elis defeated the Bantams 18 straight times from 1877 to 1917, and there was a zero 'iinder Trinity on the scoreboard at the end of every one of those games.

The early years were rough for Trinity football. As the College moved to its present site there was much student disapproval, and interest in athletics diminished; there was no varsity football team from 1879 through 1883.

Trinity did not win a football game until it defeated the Amherst Aggies (now the University of Massachusetts) 32-4 in 1887, the sixth football season in Trinity history. Twenty years later the Bantams won by their biggest margin ever with a 94-0 victory over the College of New York .

Trinity produced its first undefeated football team in 1911 with a record of six wins, zero losses, and two ties. The 1915 squad was also undefeated with a 5-0-2 record.

In 1932 Daniel E. Jessee became head coach of the Bantams and this began an important era in Trinity football. From 1932 through 1966, the 32 squads that Jessee coached won 150 games, while losing only 76 and tieing seven. Only seven of the 32 teams had season records under the .500 mark, while four teams (1934, 1949, 1954, 1955) produced undefeated and untied records .

Trinity made the national record books in 1969 with a game against Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The

final score, 43-43, stands as the highest tie score in the entire history of American intercollegiate football.

The first 100 years of Trinity College football have been interesting and enjoyable. There have been 92 seasons and 648 games played in the hundred year period. Twenty-five coaches have directed Bantam teams to 335 wins, 273 losses, and 40 ties against op­ponents ranging from Ivy League schools to New York Agricultural College and the Waterbury YMCA, Army, the traditional Little Three rivals and many other institutions, large and small .

The game, the College, and the competition have changed since 1877, but, as Trinity enters its second hundred years of football competition, the one thing that remains the same is the Trinity athlete. A scholar first, an athlete second, the Trinity football player lives in an environment which is not a stepping stone to professional sports. The "fun element" of athletic competition is vivid at Trinity, as it has been in the past, and will be in the future.

The 1977 season will provide a fine

setting for celebrating Trinity's football history. The four nome -games will showcase fine football competition against Bowdoin, and traditional rivals Williams, Coast Guard, and Wesleyan .

Three Named Full Professors

The College has announced the promotion of three members of the faculty to the rank of full professor. They are: Thomas Baird, professor of fine arts, part-time; Donald B. Galbraith, professor of biology; and Stephen Minot, professor of English, part-time.

Baird received the B.A. and the M.F.A. from Princeton. He has studied French 17th Century theatre design as a Fulbright Fellow in Paris. Prior to joining Trinity in 1970 he was associate director of Harvard University's

(continued page 2)

Page 2: 1977September

Page 2 Trinity Reporter September 1977

Town Gown Forum Explores Russia

Rounding out a decade of distinguished discussions, the Trinity community will again present a fall series of lectures called the 'Town­Gown Forum." Last year the talks by faculty specialists centered on the American experience. This year the scene shifts to the land of the troika, the Kremlin and the Hermitage.

The five lectures on Russia will be opened on October 4 by Dr. Samuel Kassow, assistant professor of history, describing "Russia: Enigma Within a Riddle." The talk will examine the highlights of Russian history and demonstrate that, contrary to popular opinion, Russia can be understood.

On October 11, Dr. James West, assistant · professor of history, will examine "Patterns of Russian History Through the Eyes of the Artist." He will explore major themes of Russian history through the country's little known art masterpieces.

A second lecture by Dr. Kassow 'The Soviet Union: Continuity and Change" on October 18, will discuss the achievements of the Soviet State, the price paid and prospects for the future.

Dr. Samuel Hendel, professor of political science, will take the audience behind the scenes on October 25 as he

Dr. DAVID L. REINER, assistant professor of mathematics, and DAVID AHLGREN, assistant professor of engineering, presented papers at the Fifth Annual Conference on Instructional Computing held at Dartmouth College. Professor Reiner presented a paper, "Algorithmic Methods in Computer Calculus," and Professor Ahlgren presented one entitled 'The Use of DYNAMO in an Undergraduate Systems Analysis Course." The conference, sponsored jointly by Dartmouth and NERCOMP (New England Regional Computing Program) heard presentations from faculty of several other New England schools, including Yale, Dartmouth, University of Connecticut and the University of Vermont.

A paper entitled "Current Party and Internal Group Influences in Connecticut Politics" by Dr. CLYDE D. McKEE, associate professor of political science, will be presented at the November meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association as part of a panel called "Patterns in State Politics."

Dr. SAMUEL D. KASSOW '66, assistant professor of history, and JOHN J.H. CHAT­FIELD '64, lecturer in history, appeared on Connecticut Public Television, Channel 24, and discussed a recent trip to Russia.

Dr. EUGENE E. LEACH, assistant professor of history and director of the American Studies Program, also appeared on Connecticut Public Television, Channel 24, on a panel discussion that followed the third Frost-Nixon interview.

An article entitled "Sexual Equality in Soviet Russia" by Dr. MICHAEL SACKS, assistant professor of sociology, appeared in the July­August issue of Society. Sacks recently read a paper, "Soviet Youth in Transition: The Impact of Social Change on Early Career Patterns," at the annual meeting of the New England Slavic Association. He has also been awarded a short­term grant for research at the Keenan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies in Washington, D.C.

Dr. WARD S. CURRAN, professor of economics, was a discussant at a meeting of the Regional Eastern Finance Association regarding research in various areas of finance.

Macmillan Publishing Co. recently published the third edition of Modern Spanish Prose and Poetry by Dr. GUSTAVE W. ANDRIAN, professor of modern languages. Macmillan also plans to produce a book Andrian worked on during his sabbatical last semester.

Dr. ARNOLD L. KERSON, associate professor of modern languages, recently presented a talk at Trinity entitled "EI concepto utopico do Rafael Landivar en Ia Rustication­Mexicana" before the Connecticut Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish

analyzes "Some Basic Myths and Realities," including the claimed superiority of the Soviet political, economic and social systems.

On November 1, Dr. Robert A. Battis, professor and chairman of economics, will cast an eye on the problems post-Stalin Russia faces as it tries to reconcile "Central Planning and a Declining Rate of Growth" with the demands for a wide spectrum of new products and a high rate of growth.

Finally, Dr. Michael Sacks, assistant professor of sociology moves into the everyday world with "Work, Marriage and Children: Problems and Patterns of Everyday Life." The November 8 talk will describe the wrenching dislocations caused by the transition from a peasant culture to that of the monolithic Soviet State.

The Town-Gown Lectures, spon­sored by the wives of Trinity faculty; alumni, administrators, and friends, are given on successive Tuesdays at 1:30 p.m. in the Goodwin Theatre of the Austin Arts Center. Registration fee for the series is $15. Inquiries should be directed to Mrs. Jonathan Burr, Trinity College, telephone 527-3151, Ext. 275.

and Portuguese. Kerson also delivered a paper before the Spanish American literature section of the Northeast Modern Language Association at the University of Vermont entitled "Diego Jose Abad, humanista mexicano del siglo XVIII ."

Dr. PHILIP C.F. BANKWITZ, professor of history, has been awarded a grant-in-aid for a post-doctoral research project entitled "Edouard Deladier and Pierre-Etienne Flandin" by the American Council of Learned Societies. The grants-in-aid were awarded to one hundred seven scholars from eighty-three academic in­stitutions and were made possible by grants from The Ford Foundation and the National En­dowment for the Humanities.

Dr. CHRISTOPHER J. SHINKMAN, director of Career Counseling, toured McGraw-Hill, Inc . in New York City and met with senior officers of the corporation as part of the Douglas 0 . Hanau Memorial Intern Program of the Eastern College Personnel Officers.

Three members of the Fine Arts Department have been represented in recent exhibitions.

Graphics by ROBERT CALE, visiting artist in studio arts, were shown in the Lions Gallery of the Senses for the visually-impaired at the Wadsworth Atheneum.

Paintings by GEORGE CHAPLIN, associate professor and director of studio arts, were exhibited in Bonn, Germany and The Hague, The Netherlands in an Art in Embassies Program sponsored by the U.S. State Department. Chaplin also had a one-man exhibit at the Hampshire College Gallery in Amherst, Massachusetts.

STEPHEJ# WOOD, artist in residence, was represented at the New Britain Museum of American Art in an exhibition entitled "Ap­perceptions."

Dr. GARY C. JACOBSON, associate professor of political science, wrote an in­troduction to a pamphlet entitled "The 95th Congress and its Committees" for the Center for Information on America. Also, he delivered a paper at the annual meeting of the Public Choice Society in New Orleans entitled "Campaign Spending and Voter Awareness of Congressional Candidates." An article which appeared in the Winter, 1976 edition of "Public Policy" entitled "Practical Consequences of Campaign Finance Reform: An Incumbent Protection Act?" has been selected for inclusion in the "Policy Studies Review Annual."

Jacobson, who will be on sabbatical leave for the 1977-78 academic year, will present a paper entitled "Reforming Campaign Finance: the Incumbency Problem" at a conference at the University of Southern California. He also plans to complete a book on money in congressional elections.

TWOSUMMERPROGRAMS

National Youth Sports Program

For the eighth consecutive summer, Trinity hosted the National Youth Sports Program, providing recreation, social activities and instruction for over 250 Hartford youngsters.

Funded by the Federal Community Services Administration, in affiliation with the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the program is designed to serve disadvantaged youngsters from the cities. Trinity was one of the 145 institutions of higher education operating within NYSP this summer, and the only program site in Con­necticut.

Richard J. Hazelton, assistant professor of physical education, served as Program Director, heading a staff of 12 coaches and physical educators, 12 college student athlete aides and a nurse.

The participants, ages 10 to 18, were provided with daily btis transportation and lunch, medical care and insurance. Instruction in 13 sports was available, along with programs emphasizing social responsibility, good nutrition and hygiene.

Two visits by Hartford Mayor George Athanson were among the highlights of the summer. A group of 90 youngsters visited the NYSP at American lnternational College in Springfield for competition in basketball, swimming, softball, track, and dance.

Upward Bound The Trinity College campus was

host this summer to the fifth annual Upward Bound Program. · This program, funded by the U.S. Office of · Education, is designed to prepare low income students for enrollment in post­secondary educational institutions.

One hundred high school students from the City of Hartford participated in the program. Almost all of these students lived in the housing units set up in Elton and Jones dormitories, but there were several who commuted to the campus each day of the six week (June 27 - August 5), five day-a-week program.

An academic atmosphere prevailed as all students were enrolled in four classes which met daily in the Life Sciences Center. Available topics of study were English, mathematics, science, social studies and Spanish, with several individual courses found under each topic. A major addition to this summer's program was the fact that there was a laboratory open for all the science classes.

The afternoon activity period in­volved the students in either college/ career counselling sessions, academic tutoring, or recreational activities ranging from tennis and basketball to radio communication and modern dance.

In the evenings the students had a supervised study period followed by evening programs which were either popular movies, speakers such as college administrators, or cultural events such as attendance of the Summerstage productions at the Austin Arts Center. A student talent show was held at the end of the program for the purpose of raising money for an Upward Bound scholarship.

The staff, headed by Director William Guzman, provided much

(continued page 3)

Professors (from page 1 J

Dumbarton Oaks Research Center for Byzantine and pre-Columbian art in Washington, D.C. He has also served on the staff of the Frick Collection in New York City and the National Gallery in Washington. A prolific author, he has written eight novels, the latest being 'The Way to the Old Sailors Home."

Baird Galbraith

Minot

Galbraith came to Trinity in 1962. He received the B.S. from Grove City College and the Sc.M. and the Ph.D. from Brown University. He is a specialist in developmental genetics and his research has included studies of hair growth, the genetic control of pigmentation in mammals, and in­teractions between embryonic tissues during development. The recipient of numerous fellowships and awards, he is currently conducting research with

· support from the National Center for Toxicological Research. Many of his articles have appeared in scientific journals.

Minot has taught at Trinity since 1959. He is the author of three books and more than 20 published short stories and articles. Minot received the A.B. from Harvard College and the M.A. from Johns Hopkins University. Prior to joining the Trinity faculty, he taught at Johns Hopkins, Bowdoin College and the University of Con­necticut. He is the recipient of a fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts for 1976-77. Minot's most recent book is a collection of short stories entitled "Crossings, Stories by Stephen Minot." He has been published in the Atlantic Monthly, Redbook, The Ladies Home Journal, The Kenyon Review, and Harpers, among others.

TRINITY REPORTER

September 1977 Voi.8No.l

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

Published by the Office of Public Relations, 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, Kathleen Frederick '71; Assistant Editor, Milli Silvestri; Sports In ­formation, Gerald F. LaPlante ' 76, Director of Alumni and External Affairs, Gerald J. Hansen, Jr. '51.

Page 3: 1977September

The freshman class, 242 men and 209 women, arrived on campus August 28 for a week of orientation. Members of the Class of 1981 come from 30 states plus the District of Columbia, the Virgin Islands, Peru, Japan, Malaysia, Iran, Mexico, the Bahamas, Belgium, Greece, Venezuela, England and Spain. Sixteen transfer students also participated in the orientation program.

Fifty-eight percent of the freshman class are public school graduates; 42% come to Trinity from private schools. Among the new arrivals are the following sons and daughters of alumni:

Dirck Barhydt, Jr. son of Mr. & Mrs. Dirck Barhydt '53 John Bernard Braskamp son of Mr. & Mrs. Bernard

Alison Marie Brennan

Louis Joel Bromberg

Amy Grace Brown

Joseph Angelo Camilleri

Marian Louise Davis

Frederick Rommel Eberle

Harrison Baldwin Fisher

Minna Agee Hardy Roger Alanson Knight

William Curtiss Kolodney

William K. Luby Justin Salvatore Maccarone, Jr.

John Mark Mazzarella

Karen Lee McDonald

John Hoover Miller Diana Noble Miner

Alison Leigh Mountford

Macauley Bancroft Nash

Judith Ann Seeber

James Anthony Shapiro

Pamela Ann Southworth

Kimberley Anne Strongin

John Leonard Thompson, Jr.

Susan Harney Toland

Anne Fortune Warner

Braskamp '54 . daughter of Dr. & Mrs. Edward N.

Brennan '51 son of Mr. & Mrs. Solomon Z. Bromberg '43 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Jacob B. Brown, Jr. '53 son of Dr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Camilleri '51 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. John J. Davis '54 son of Dr. & Mrs. Charles F. Eberle '55 son of Mr. & Mrs. William W. Fisher, Jr. (Louise Hopkins Fisher '73) daughter of William A. Hardy, Jr. '51 son of Mr. & Mrs. Haven A. Knight '50 son of Mr. & Mrs. William Kolodney '46 son of Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Luby '55 son of Mr. & Mrs. Justin Maccarone, Sr. '50 (Lucia De Dominicis Salvatore MA '55) son of Dr. & Mrs. John A. Mazzarella '54 daughter of The Rev. & Mrs. Durstan McDonald '58 son of Mr. & Mrs. John H. Miller '52 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. John R. Miner '57 MS '67 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Mountford '55 son of Mr. & Mrs. F. Philip Nash, Jr. '51 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. David L. Seeber '53 son of Mr. & Mrs. Edwin S. Shapiro '52 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Mason P. Southworth '55 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. James W. Strongin '48 son of Mr. & Mrs. John L. Thompson '58 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Robert Toland, Jr. '44 daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Richmond P. Warner 'SO

September 1977 Trinity Reporter Page3

FACULTY FORUM

Which China? By Ranbir V ohra

Charles A. Dana Professor of Political Science

With Secretary of State Vance in Peking, ·a host of contradictory opinions have been publicly expressed on what action America should take regarding China and Taiwan. Those who advocate a speedy nor­malization" of relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) would still like to see the U.S.-Taiwan ties remain unbroken at the unofficial level, but are not quite clear how that can be done.

The others, who feel strongly that Taiwan should not be treated as an expendable pawn, would also like the establishment of full diplomatic relations with Peking but only after ensuring that the Taiwan ties are vigorously maintained. Some of the main issues have been confused by both sides and need to be clearly ar­ticulated.

The legal issue is rather clearcut: By accepting that "all Chinese on either side of the Taiwan Strait maintain there is but one China and that Taiwan is a part of China," and by recognizing that Peking, not Taipei, is the capital of China, American relations with Taiwan have, of necessity, to undergo a radical change. "Normalization," therefore, means no more than translating the above universally accepted fact into diplomatic practice - full recognition of Peking, and the derecognition of Taipei, as the legitimate government of China.

This action will automatically mean the annulment of the 1954 Washington-Taipei security treaty, and lead to the withdrawal of the American military from Taiwan.

Several questions arise: How far was the Nationalist government in Taiwan led to declare continually that it was the legal government of all China because of the American desire, during the cold war, that such a fiction be maintained? Do all Taiwanese agree that Taiwan is a part of China? Would America accept this formula in the case of Korea?

The unspoken hope of those who are pushing for "normalization" is that Taiwan will not be invaded by the PRC and that unofficial American ties will keep it developing economically and socially in the direction of a capitalist democracy, so that it will become an increasingly unattractive proposition for Peking to want to absorb it. In case China does reintegrate Taiwan with the mainland it will, it is hoped, be a long time before this happens. By then Americans will no longer feel responsible for Taiwan.

Believers in Realpolitik see in "normalization" a pressure tactic that will force Moscow to reach for greater accommodation with the U.S. and settle bilateral problems on American terms. They also believe that "nor­malization" will not only bring Peking closer to Washington but will strengthen PRC's antagonistic stand against Russia. There is, however, a serious flaw in this thinking. In any triangular power balance stability is possible only if all three powers are equidistant from each other. The drawing together of any two will demolish the balance. If Russia feels seriously threatened by a Sino­American "collusion" it may take some desperate action which may irreparably impair Russo-American detente. Then again if China does not improve relations with Russia it is, in a manner of speaking, left at the mercy

of American goodwill. China will have no leverage against America and no diplomatic flexibility. Peking has to, and sooner or later surely will, establish better relations with Moscow.

Japan, South Korea and the Southeast Asian states are anxious to see America remain a credible power in the West Pacific. "Normalization" may not only weaken the American presence in this area but may lead Taiwan to counter the situation by developing ties w_ith Russia.

A most important issue, which gets clouded by the legal and the Realpolitik aspects of the case, is the moral issue.

America must not appear to sacrifice friends of long standing, especially weak ones, for political expediency; Taiwan is far more successful as a developing society than China, it is more democratic than China, and definitely anti-Communist and so a part of the "free world" America claims to protect; Taiwan has a better record of "human rights" than China; Taiwan over the last quarter century has developed close cultural, social and economic ties with America that cannot be cut off casually; and how would a break with Taiwan be seen by America's other allies? Would they continue to believe in the sanctity of American treaties?

Is the situation impossible to solve? Not really. Though the Chinese insist that the U.S. break diplomatic relations with Taiwan and withdraw troops from there, they are in no position to dictate to Taiwan or to non-official Americans. Peking, itself, has recommended the Japanese for­mula according to which an American representative can replace the embassy in Taipei to handle commercial and consular affairs. Except for the problem of supplying arms directly, the Americans can, no doubt, continue to carry on other activities as heretofore. It may come as a surprise to some that since Japan broke off diplomatic relations with Taiwan trade and other contacts between the two countries have not only not diminished, but have grown con­siderably.

The future of Taiwan will depend to a great extent on the Taiwanese themselves. If they continue to progress the way they have been and decide to develop an independent identity they will have the sympathy of many.

In any case the time has come to cut the China Gordian knot. Is President Carter the Alexander we have all been waiting for?

(Reprinted with ,permission from the August 23rd issue of The Hartford Courant.) \

I I

\ Upward Bound (~rom page2)

individualized work for the students. Ten academic teachers made for a low ratio of approximately ten students per teacher. There were ten residential counselors who supervised the dorms, led activities, and provided academic assistance.

At the conclusion of the program all the students were given the op­portunity to experience some outdoor survival education at the Wilderness School run by Wesleyan University in New Fairfield, Connecticut. Guzman feels that this is a valuable type of experience and expresses hope that it can be a part- of the program every year.

Page 4: 1977September

Page 4 Trinity Reporter September 1977

Annual Giving Sets $500,000 Goal

Annual Gifts in the range of $500,000 will again be needed to sustain the quality of Trinity's academic program this year. The annual appeal for unrestricted support will be made by many volunteers including trustees, class agents and other alumni, parents, friends, and student phonothon workers.

The Annual Giving Campaign opens in late September and concludes June 30, 1978.

Chairman of the Annual Giving Campaign is Douglas T. Tansill '61, first vice president of White, Weld & Company, and an alumnus trustee of the College. National Chairman of the Alumni Fund is Thomas C. DePatie '52, senior marketing manager for IBM, and also an alumnus trustee. DePatie served as Alumni Fund chairman during the 1976-77 cam­paign.

Mr. and Mrs. L. Thomas Melly, parents of Thomas L. Melly '80, are serving as chairmen of The Parents Fund. Mr. Melly is a partner of Goldman, Sachs & Company.

James B. Lyon is serving a second term as Chairman of The Friends of Trinity Fund. Mr. Lyon, an Amherst alumnus, is a partner in the law firm of Murtha, Cullina, Richter & Pinney.

Morrison H. Beach, chairman of The Travelers Insurance Companies, and a charter trustee of Trinity, is Chairman

1972

1973

1975

1943

1951

1964

1969

1970

1971

1972

1973

1975

1976

Class ENGAGEMENTS

PETER ROBERT BLUM to Sarah Randolph Fitzgerald JEFFREY KUPPERMAN to Nancy Nudell MARK L. SPLAlNGARD to Deborah Willey JOHN JEFFREY MIESOWITZ to Christina Elizabeth Weaver

WEDDINGS CARLOS RICHARDSON to Jean Pallett Dodson, May 20, 1977 JOHN E. FRIDAY, JR. to Joan Gray Israel, August 7, 1977 JAMES S. TWERDAHL to Nand Angell Hecker LARRY H. WHIPPLE to Susan B. Morley, May 29, 1977 JOHN C. CHAPIN, JR . to Elizabeth W. Lozier, July 9, 1977 ALEXANDER J. BELIDA, JR. to Patricia Reber, September 4, 1976 JOSEPH EWBANK to Linda Cocklin, June 11, 1977 JOSEPH R. SMITH II to Judith Carol Carson, December 18, 1976 BARBARA F. BASS to A. Neal Owens, Jr., May 14, 1977 GREGG S. NEIMAN to Karen Bjork, May 14, 1977 ROBERT J. FASS, JR. to Janet Lee Schob, March26, 1977 STEVEN BARKAN to Barbara Tennent, September 5, 1976 DAVID AUSTIN SCHIRMER to Valerie Forbes Calderon, July 2, 1977 GARY P. TAYLOR to Deborah Anne Mott, June 11, 1977 ELIZABETH CRARY LORD to Robert Blackburn Gray, Sep­tember1977 VAUGHAN DURKEE to Kevin McTernan, March 26, 1977 ELIZABETH ANN ALLEN to Richard John Lynch, June 18, 1977 JAMIE BENNETT TILGHMAN to David Hepburn Deming, Sep­tember1977 GORDON BURKETT to Terry Ricketts, September 11, 1976 WILLIAM BAXTER METZ to Koren Rae MicheL July 23, 1977

1973-1973 DIANE FIERRI to DAVID I. BROWN, September4, 1977

of the Business and Industry Associates.

Student representatives to the Alumni Fund are three members of the senior class: Kenneth S. Grossman, Alexander M. Moorrees, and Deborah J. Sikkel. They will organize major phonothons during the year on behalf of the Alumni Fund.

Goals totaling $500,000 have been established as follows: Alumni Fund, $305,000; Parents Fund, $100,000; Business & Industry Associates, $65,000, and Friends of Trinity Fund, $30,000.

In 1976-77, Annual Gifts totaling $426,596 were received from these sources.

According to President Lockwood, 'The continuing generosity of many individuals is one of the main reasons for Trinity's strength today. We are especially grateful to those who have recently responded to the College's annual and capital fund-raising ap­peals. During the past few years, as everyone close to the College knows, Trinity has been engaged in its most ambitious fund-raising program, seeking new endowment and support for a library addition as well as our ongoing Annual Giving. Now, as the capital campaign draws to a close, there is the opportunity to increase the resources available for the academic program through Annual Giving."

Notes 1974-1972 LINELL NASH SMITH '74 to

HENRY DIEDRICH HOLLJES, June 11, 1977

1975-1976 BARBARA BRUCKER '75 to STEVEN TRIGGS '76, May 28, 1977

1976-1976 PAULA A. GALIETTE to EUGENEY. SHEN, July23, 1977

1962

1965

1968

1969

1971

1972

1973

MA1971

MA1972

BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Johnson, daughter, Kristin Elizabeth, May 15, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence LeWinn, daughter, Kaja, March 25, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. Tom Snedeker, daughter, Jennifer, October 26, 1976 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hopkins, daughter, Melissa Anne, February 2, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. William Snow, son, Patrick Joseph, October 10, 1976 Mr . and Mrs. Peter Keller, daughter, Laura Dayton, November21, 1976 Mr. and Mrs. Stuart A. Hamilton, daughter, Rhia Oliver, November 21, 1976 Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Mann, daughter, Kelly, December 6, 1976 Mr. and Mrs. John McLoughlin, daughter, Ariana Merrill, April20, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Mittenthal, son, Eric Brian, January 14, 1977 Dr. and Mrs. Mark Hagedorn, son, February 7, 1977 Ruth '73 and Malcolm Poole '73, son, Malcolm Augustus, March 17, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. David L. Knowlton, son, David Scott , March 4, 1977 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crowley, son, John Francis, December 27, 1976

PARENTS WEEKEND

October 28-30

09 The Rev. Paul H. Barbour, D .O . 14 High St. Farmington, CT 06032

BAYARD SNOW shows off his poetic talent by sending us the following: "Writing a little, for the few who still read; Slowing a little, losing my speed; Helping a little , those who have need; Hurting a little, when cut I still bleed; Living a little, so far I succeed ."

Congratulations to The Rev. PAUL ROBERTS who celebrated his 90th birthday on August 3rd. Since 1929, except during World War II, he has conducted the Sunday services at Christ Church, Harwich Port , Massachusetts.

15 Mr. William B. Pressey 6Parkway Hanover, NH 03755

We had a note from the wife of The Rev. BERTRAM SMITH letting us know that he suffered a stroke in September of 1976 and, after many stays in hospitals, he is now in a nursing home and doing fairly well. If anyone wishes to contact Bert, messages or cards could be sent to Mrs. Smith at 826 Green Hill Road, Dallas, Texas 75232.

23 Mr. James A. Cal~no 35 White Street Hartford, CT 06114

CONNIE GESNER, AB NEWTON, IKE NEWELL and JIM CALANO represented your Class at the 22nd Annual Immortals Dinner held May 27th at the College. Also present were Claudia Gesner, Alice Newton, Lucile Marvin, Lorraine DiLorenzo and Christine O 'Connell, the latter three being relatives of Jim's . A good time was had by all. It was great to be back on campus again. The Class of '27 was officially inducted into the Immortals Club .

JOE MANION helps out high school students in San Diego, California with their Greek, Latin and French . Joe also speaks Spanish fluently. He claims that in his territory Spanish is a "very helpful adjunct in business, love and whatnot. " I think I'll take up Spanish.

JIM SEELEY has retired after having been in the insurance business since 1922. He has moved to Northfield, Minnesota to be near his son's family and to indulge in good fishing. Congratulations to the Seeleys on reaching their 53rd wedding anniversary.

We are saddened by the _passing of JOE FOLEY on July 14th. Joe had conducted a very successful travel agency in Hartford since 1926. He was one of the 15 football players who invaded Prince­ton, New Jersey in the Fall of 1919 and held the powerful Princeton team to a 21 to 0 score, which was a moral victory for Trinity. We extend our deep condolence to Mrs. Foley.

We extend our deepest sympathy and con­dolences to IKE NEWELL upon the demise of his beloved wife, Marie, who passed away in July. You will all recall that Marie was really one of us as she served in the President's office during the 20's. She was very close to the student body, being always very cooperative and un­derstanding of our problems.

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

MOE LISCHNER, the old reliable, is still practicing medicine; that is what keeps him going. I had a nice chat with him on the telephone recently and he sure is alert and full of pep. Your Secretary, his wife, Olga, and Betty Noble had a nice visit with KEN SMITH and his wife, Emmy, at Cooperstown in July. Ken performed again this summer in the local opera and is still "hitting the ball" full time at the Baseball Hall of Fame. GEORGE MALCOLM­SMITH was featured in the Hartford Courant Magazine recently in a four page spread telling about his "man-about-town" image, his personal exploits, his interest in jazz music and his collection of jazz records, probably the best and most complete in the world. George has varied interests and is a regular volunteer in hospital services and took part in the Spring Warehouse Bonanza Sale staged by the Hartford Hospital Auxiliary. Your Secretary and his wife spent three days with TED and Elizabeth JONES at their home at Yarmouth Port, Cape Cod, and while there attended the Annual Cape Cod Trinity Party at the SHERMAN PARKER's '22. It was nice to meet Sherm's new wife, Katie, whom we enjoyed very much.

DAVE HADLOW and the TONY TRAINERS (Honorary '2S) are looking forward to the football season as are the JOHN AINLEYS, the MOE LISCHNERS, the KEN SMITHS, the MONTGOMERYS and JOHN DORAN '22, the old Trinity lineman. The Class of 1925 congratulates the freshman lightweight crew for winning at the Dad Vail Regatta at Philadelphia this year and being named National In­tercollegiate Champions, College Division, for 1977. Your Secretary and his wife are very happy that their grandson, David Hobson, decided on Yale College . instead of a school on the West

Coast. Dave, who lives in Portland, Oregon, was admitted on an early decision and will enter with the Class of 1981 this September.

Glad to hear that PAUL NORMAN '23 is recovered from a brief illness and hope to see him at one or more of the football games. Did you know that this year will be Trinity's One Hundredth Anniversary of football7 Trinity , the 12th college in the United States to play a regula r schedule, started foo tball in 1877. I hope that Nineteen Twenty-Fivers will make it a point to come back to the Williams game on October 8th, and enjoy the Reunion / Homecoming Weekend .

2 6 Mr. N. Ross Pa rke 18 Van Buren A venue W est Ha rtfo rd , CT 06107

Summertime was vacation time for all of us to be sure, but how about you good classmates sending your Class Secretary word of what you are doing and how you are these days.

In this vein , we all hope that BEN WARNER's dear wife, Elizabeth, has been making good progress from the fall she suffered, and we hope that the NORM PITCHERS are doing better now that a glorious summer has brought much comfort and happiness to all.

We're grateful to hear from BOB NEWELL that he and his dear, Marion, summered at the beach and enjoy their leisure .

On the other side of the coin, we and many Trinitarians who were in college at the time of the twenties join in sending our deepest sym­pathy and prayerful love to the loved ones of BOB and Marion NEWELL and especially to Bob's brother, IKE '23, at the sudden loss of Ike's dearly beloved wife, Marie, who served many of us so well as she worked in our Trinity office at the time we matriculated .

Also, many of us share in the real loss of our good BILL WALSH on July 6th in Tucson, Arizona. Bill was a popular figure in our class as well as an excellent contributor in the Armed Services as prosecuting attorney at the Nuremburg War Crime Trials. We all send to his beloved wife, Dorothy Prescott Walsh, and his three sisters, our deepest sympathy and prayerful love .

To all , I hope you had a good summer and wish an ever promising future .

27 Mr. Winthrop H. Segur Park Ridge Apt. 516 1320 Berlin Turnpike Wethersfield , CT 06109

How tempus fugits! Just received the June/ July Trinity Reporter and once again was notified it is time to get news in for the September issue. It can only be hoped that the New Trinity Immortals of 1927 will send in some tidbits for future use in our Class notes.

Chairman ANDY FORRESTER reports the birth of his second granddaughter through Andy '61.

I just happen to know that the STANLEY BELLS planned a Scandinavian trip this summer and that the BOB CONDITS spent a good part of the summer at Lake George, NY. ROGE HARTT and his wife were probably off to somewhere but for some reason or other, he does not tell me about it.

Your Secretary and his Missus spent a delightful two weeks with son, HUB '58, in Davis, Calif., where he is a candidate for a Ph .D. at the University of California at Davis. He toured us over all of Northern California and made our trip something never to forget.

So that's my news for the first fall issue and I only hope you fellows will send me some notes to pass on to classmates.

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

Your Secretary regrets the lack of news for the Class of 1930 in recent issues and hopes classmates-will send in word of happenings. Send them to the Alumni Office or to the writer.

BERNARD DIGNAM says he is now working only part-time, but the good doctor will find his patients won't let him retire completely. In fact he does more than practice medicine; he writes about it, rec-ently using the Hartford Courant to express his opinion against the use of the con­troversial drug, "Laetrile ."

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

REED MITCHELL, now emeritus professor of physics from Michigan Tech . University, has moved to Mauset, Maine 04656. His son, DAVID '75, and his wife, BETH FERRO '75, are both studying for their Ph.D. at Syracuse University .

32 Julius Smith , D.M.D. 242 Trumbull St. HartforJ. CT 06103

Judge WALTER SIDOR has retired from his Connecticut Superior Court position but will continue to hear cases as a senior judge of the

Page 5: 1977September

same court on a part-time basis. "I plan to do some traveling and relaxing," he says. He will long be remembered as the judge who drew the ire of consumer advocates, including Ralph Nader, by allowing the merger of International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation with the Hartford Fire Insurance Company in 1972. He ruled Nader and the other plaintiffs had no legal standing to challenge the merger.

Also retired is our Class Treasurer BILL GRAINGER, who makes his new home at Route 1, Box 177, Readsboro, Vermont 05350.

ED LAWTON writes that he retired several years ago to Ellington, Florida and is busy with shuffleboard, dancing, bicycling, swimming, boating and fishing. Their sixth grandchild is on the way. They travel a lot in their Holiday Rambler travel trailer and expect to be at Trin for the 45th.

Early retirement came to NATE GLASSMAN, necessitated by cardiac problems, but each March 17 he recalls the frosh-soph battle in 1929 when he was tossed to the lower branches of an elm tree to hang our '32 banner in victory.

CUSHMAN REYNOLDS says he came to the Amherst game last year and seemed to be the only one around. There wiU:be many more back in October for Reunion, Cush!

We received a note from FRED GEIGER who was elected chief judge of the 19th Judicial Circuit Lake and McHenry Counties, Illinois on Janu<>ry 1, 1977. He and his wife attended the marriage of their third child and only daughter, Diane, in Seattle, Washington in May.

HUGH CAMPBELL and DAVE GALINSKY will help Your Secretary on arrangements for Reunion. We need more volunteers so write and say you're included. Then stay for the Trinity trip to London the following week.

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

The Rev. JACK SHARKEY returned last April from his 12th three-week visit to the Episcopal Church in Haiti. This has become his "ministry in retirement." He helps to raise money to feed 200 children every day at St. Peter's School in Haiti - 2000 feet high in the mountains of this black , French-speaking Caribbean, free Republic.

34 Charles A. Tucker, M .D. 7 Wintergreen Lane West Hartford, CT 06117

We are at the stage where retirements are becoJili)lg quite common. BILL FARRELL retired from Aetna Life and Casualty on May 1st. He was regional government relations manager in the company's Boston office. BERT HOLLAND has announced his retirement from his position as vice president for resources at Wellesley after a most distinguished career and received kudos from others in educational administration. His wisdon, dedication and stamina were extolled.

The Reverend ALFRED B. ROLLINS gave the invocation at the installation of his son, Dr. Alfred B. Rollins, Jr., who was inaugurated as president of Old Dominion University of Norfolk, Virginia in February of this year. His grandson, John '71, was an attendant. We have just learned that DOUG GAY has remarried and has been so for the past few years.

Your president, CHUCK KINGSTON, made the local news in an account of his honoring of the senior members of the Trinity varsity football team each year by dinner and other festivities.

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

BOB LAU has been elected a member of the Mercer County (New Jersey) democratic organization executive committee.

Paddon

TONY PADDON, director of northern medical services for the International Grenfell Association in northern Newfoundland and Labrador, received the prestigious 11th annual Royal Bank of Canada award. The award, which is given to a person whose life has been dedicated to human welfare and the common good, consists of a check for $25,000 and a solid gold medal. He was cited as being instrumental in introducing modern medical facilities and ser­vices. Tony's birthday on July 10 marked his official retirement and the conclusion of a very distinguished career.

Jennifer and JOHN KELLY '34 recently toured the Florida Keys and stopped off to see MIMI MARQUET on their boat moored at the beautiful Indies Inn . Duck Key , Florida. Mimi

says they both looked great. Also AL HOPKINS '40 and his wife, Jean, joined the Marquets and enjoyed some fishing on the boat. The Marquets are enjoying their eighth year at Duck Keys.

OLLIE JOHNSON and Jack Riege have won the Garvan Cup two years in a row at the Hartford Golf Club.

In a letter to ANDY ONDERDONK '34, ERIC PURDON writes that he was looking forward to visits from BILL WETHERILL who is now living in Chestertown on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, and BILL PAYNTER '37 and his wife, Jane, who were in Annapolis looking for a house as Bill has been transferred to Washington. Both would be 42-year reunions. Eric had just finished three months sprucing up his home for a House and Garden tour.

36 CHARLES GABLER has retired from Merck &

Co. , Inc. , Rahway, New Jersey, after almost 36 years. He and his wife have moved to Ocean City, New Jersey. Charles has three sons, one of whom is married, and a seven-year-old daughter .

After serving as associate dean of two medical schools, ART JENSEN has retired to the mountains of North Carolina.

37 Mr. Robert M . Kelly 33 Hartford Ave. Madison, CT 06443

STAN FISCHER now lives in Manila with his wife, Mila, who at their marriage brought to Stan's household seven distinguished Spanish family names. Stan and Mila are now in the travel business together and along with their 12· year-old son visited their three other children in the United States and England last December. Stan has had a varied career after a World War II stint with the U.S. Army in Australia, New Guinea, and the Philippines. After working with a sugar trading firm and with Prentice Hall, book publishers, he was employed by the American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines for many years, serving as executive vice president and professional manager. Stan doubts he can make the 40th but would love to hear from his Trinity friends, '37 or otherwise.

AL DOTY reports he loves living in Naples, Florida where he has "headquartered" for seven years . His wife, Ruth, recently took second place in the Naples Country Club golf championship. AI is definitely planning to attend the 40th.

BILL HULL had a great winter in Sarasota, Florida, where BUD BAUER and his wife,

. Cynthia, visited last January. Bill recently at~ tended the marriage of his son, Larry, who works for NASA at the Goddard Space Center. Our favorite Class Agent is definitely looking forward to the 40th Reunion.

HARRY SANDERS, ED LEHAN and Your Secretary along with spouses have started getting ready for the 40th by holding several pre­reunions, at one of which a long distance call was placed to GEORGE LEPAK in Alexandria, Virginia. George seemed pleased to hear from us but we suspect that the time of the call (somewhat in the wee hours) may have led his wife, Anne, to conclude that nothing much has changed with the passing years .

Let's everyone show at Trinity for the 40th, October 7, 8 and 9.

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

STURGE SHIELDS has retired atter 30 years with the United Natibns. He writes that he has now been liberated to do all those things he never had time for before. He spent two months in late spring camping through the Southwest, and spent a few days with JOHN and Irma TIEDEMAN in their beautiful home in Sun City, Arizona. He says in every way, he is having a ball.

FRANK BURKE, who is retired and living in Atlanta, Georgia, says when his wife decides to terminate her career with AT&T, they may move to the St. Petersburg-Clearwater area in Florida.

ART SHERMAN, rector of St. John's Church in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, celebrated the nuptial masses at the marriage of his son, Ste­phen to Heather McPherson Hainey in June of 1976. Steve is in the Air Force and stationed at Rickenbacker AFB, Ohio. Again on January 1, 1977, he celebrated the nuptial masses at the marriage of his son, Christopher, to Jacqueline Boles. Son Chris is with Cablevision in Warren, Ohio.

ERICK HOEGBERG has been transferred to Princeton, New Jersey by FMC Corporation and is now doing patent liaison work in the agricultural chemical division at the Chemical Research and Development Center.

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

There has been a pleasant responsr to thr Alumni New' cuds recently sent nul. Keep them

coming in men from around the globe. Although a number of our illustrious brethren have allegedly retired we also find that new careers are underway .

KEVIN DUNNE of Campobello, South Carolina, has started a new textile by-products firm, Dunne & Hill. He also reports his third son starting college at Washington & Lee this fall.

GREG GABOURY reports from Florida that he is now retired, is studying economics at the University of Florida, playing plenty of golf and has bought a new home in Gainesville, Florida. He also reports two grandchildren living in the Detroit area, a reason for some of his acknowledged traveling . Your Secretary remembers Greg as an outs.tanding soccer goal tender. ·

HERB HALL writes from Princeton, New Jersey that his firm is active worldwide in Air Pollution Control Systems. Proudly he also advises that daughter, Molly, has received her M.D. from Cornell and now is an intern. Two sons are enroute to medical and law degrees.

The word from Durham, England is that The Rev. HENRY HAYDEN is on a 1977 summer exchange and carrying out parish activities as well as a chaplaincy at St. Aiden's College, Durham University.

The RICHARD HART family reports that Kate enjoyed a spring visit to daughter, Hilary, now living in Hawaii with her Coast Guard stationed husband.

EUGENE LIEDER from Austin, Texas reports that he is now definitely retired.

RICHARD LEGGETT advises that his family is all well and he had a delightful telephone call visit from GREG GABOURY on Memorial Day about a N.Y. Yankee ballgame they attended on that day in 1938. Time marches on but memories sustain.

My apologies to each reader for an error in my June/ July material. A delightful note from C.C. JOHNSON SPINK advises that he will continue as president and publisher of the Sporting News until 1982 and thereafter as a consultant. The newsweekly is now in its 92nd year . Johnson also reports that he is working closely with MA IT BIRMINGHAM '42. Both men are doubtless "working" longer hours per dav than they did as students.

40 Dr. Richard Morris 120 Cherry Hill Dr. Newington, CT 06111

DICK ONDERDONK visited BOB BODKIN who is the current headmaster, Marvelwood School, Cornwall, Connectic;t. His son, REYNOLDS '76, now lives in Hartford.

CHARLIE WALKER has marked his 22nd anniversary as musical conductor of the Hunter College Playhouse in New York, serving as director of the recent production, "Yeomen of the Guard." Since 1951, Charlie has been organist and choirmaster of the Church of the Heavenly Rest in New York City. He also recently completed a term as president of the American Guild of Organists.

GUS ANDRIAN and wife, Peggy, have recently returned from a pleasant sojourn in Spain.

DICK MORRIS was indirectly honored at ceremonies in Liscannor, County Clare, Ireland, where he was hailed as the author who brought Liscannor native, John P. Holland, inventor of the modern submarine, back into history. Captain · Laurence Wrigley, U.S.N., commander USS Holland, stationed in Holy Loch, Scotland, was the principal speaker. After the ceremonies he presented especially inscribed copies of Dick's book on Holland to several of the dignitaries who attended the ceremonies. A report of the affair appeared in The Irish Times on Monday, July 11.

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

PAUL HOYLEN reports that he became a grandfather for the second time last October, with a boy born in Tucson. He is continuing with his part-time job with the Wheeler Mortuary in Demings, New Mexico.

CULLEY ROBERTS has been named an ac­count vice president at Paine, Webber, Jackson and Curtis, Inc .'s Hartford office.

42 :vir. :Vlartin D. \ \ond JQ Tontin Hill Rd. \.\'e,t Simsbury, CT 06092

FRANK F. FASI, currently serving his third four-year term as mayor of Honolulu, received an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from the Secretary of Education and Culture of the Philippines. He recieved the degree for his "outstanding and exemplary service in com­munity works in the developing countries of the Asian Pacific Region ." Also on a recent trip to Taiwan, Frank received the Order of the Brilliant Star from the Republic of China, the highest dl'coration awarded by thl' government to a foreignl'r.

Dr. MICHAF.I A.. ZACCARI 01 San Antonio

September 1977 Trinity Reporter Page 5

Texas, the executive director of the Alliance of Child Development Associations, has been co­author and co-researcher on three papers dealing with child care: "Opinions on Day Care and Social Policy," "An Administrative Review on Federal Standards," and "A Position Paper on the Roles of Governments on Standards, Regulations and Laws for Day Care." ·

The Rev. HENRY GOETZ, who formerly had a parish in San Antonio, has moved to Scotts­dale, Arizona.

KEN ALBRECHT plans on attending our 35th Reunion this fall and is hoping to renew old friendships.

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

DICK COBB reports that he has a new home and a new job. Dick writes that he has moved to within walking distance of his "ketch" at 2395 Filbert Street, San Francisco, California 94123. He also writes that he is regional manager for American Brass and Iron Foundry, "the largest cast iron foundry west of the Mississippi" and that his organization owns and operates a large plastic pipe plant under the aforementioned name.

CHET WARD writes that he was graduated from Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia in August 1976 with an L.L.M. in taxation and is presently senior partner in the law firm of Ward & Ward, P .O . Box 1922, Spartanburg, South Carolina. Chet also advises that his partner is his wife (as of October 9, 1976), the former Gayllis Robinson, B.A. Magna Cum Laude 1972, Emory University, J.D. 1975, L.L.M. in Taxation, 1976, Emory University. The Class of 1943 .extends heartiest congratulations to Chet.

CARLOS RICHARDSON was married to Jean Dodson on Friday, May :io, 1977 in the First Unitarian Church , 4190 Front Street, San Diego, California. The Class extends heartiest congratulations to Carlos. Carlos sent a copy of his wedding invitation which contains a drawing of an airplane and provided the following by way of explanation: 'There's a story behind the logo - on February 21, 1977 Jean and I were returning from Baja, California and experienced unforecast headwinds which depleted my fuel -I lost both engines with the runway in sight but elected to ditch (at night) in San Diego Bay. Jean and I swam to shore (40 feet) and after that we finalized our plans to get married." It would appear their major problems are behind them.

GORDON POTTER advises us that he was married on August 1, 1975 to_the former..Mrs. Nancy Q. Riker and the Class extends heartiest congratulations. Moreover, Gordon writes that he has four stepchildren as a result of this marriage, one of whom, Cynthia S. Riker, is attending Trinity, Class of 1978. Gordon resides at 10 Broadmoor Drive, Rumson, New Jersey 07769, where his telephone number is (201) 842-1656. His business is Turner Subs. Agency, 235 Park Avenue S., New York, New York 10003, telephone (212) 254-4454.

JIM DENNY writes that he was busy as coordinator of the 28th Annual Conference for Supervision Management held March 27, 28, & 29 in Morgantown, West Virginia. He writes that the Industrial Engineering Department of West Virginia University worked closely with industry and several chapters of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers on the project.

44 SPIRO PETERSON is currently chairman of

the Regents Advisory Committee on graduate study, made up of the 12 graduate deans of the state assisted universities of Ohio. The com­mittee is advisory to the chancellor of the Ohio Board of Regents.

45 Mr. Andrew W. Milligan 15 Winterset Lane West Hartford. CT 06117

JOSEPH HEIST AND has been elected bishop coadjustor of the Diocese of Arizona. He was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree by the Virginia Theological Seminary in May.

GEORGE TYLER has just completed 30 years of government service with DCAOC com­munications support division of the Pe11tagon in Washington, D.C.

47 · Paul tKingston, M.D. Barbourtown Rd. , RFD #1 Collinsville. CT 06022

BOB ROSENBERG has been awarded a Cottrell College Science Grant in support of independent research projects. Bob is Robert McMilan Professor of Chemistry at Lawrence University in Wisconsin, and has recently published a textbook entitled "Principles of Physical Chemistry," published by Oxford University Press in New York. The bonk will f>p fN junior-senior phv~icdl chPn'i'' ,,. · .,.. ,. ~ cilorc. in \h<'noi~tn .

Page 6: 1977September

Page 6 Trinity. Reporter September 1977

4 8 The Rt. Rev. E. Otis Charles 231 East First So. St. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111

DICK WEITZEL has been promoted to manager of property conservation for Borden Inc. in Columbus, Ohio.

DAVE LAMBERT has become a partner in the law firm of Brownstein Zeidman Schomer and Chase, Washington, D.C.

49 ART PADDOCK, who is a civil engineering

technician with the Alameda County Flood Control in Hayward, California, is serving as a member of the board of directors of the Student League of San Francisco. The Student League serves youth of the Bay Area through many diversified programs.

so Mr. James R. Glassco, Jr. 1024 Pine Hill Rd. Mclean, VA 22101

We were pleased to hear that JOSEPH (Winkie) BENNETT is practicing internal medicine in Paoli, Pa. and is coping with poverty resulting from: daughter Kimberlea (age 20) attending Gettysburg College, Penelope (18) attending the University of Richmond, Amy Jo (16) attending Agnes Irwin School, and sons Wade (14) and Matthew (6) at the Haverford School. Winkie reports that his wife is an aspiring political observer, who is slightly to the right of James Buckley.

JOHN BIDDLE, after being a widower for five years, married Amy Van Roden in Bryn Mawr, Pa. on March 5th. With John's two children and Amy's three, they live at 607 Winsford Rd. in Bryn Mawr. John continues to travel around the country each winter presenting his sailing-film­show lectures to over 75 audiences. His 1977 show features the Tall Ships that were assembled for the Bicentennial Year.

DAN LOHNES took over as athletic director in August 1976 at the St. Andrews School in Middletown, Delaware. He also is the head football coach. We hear also that his daughter, Victoria, finished at the University of New Hampshire last Christmas, was married in March, and now lives in Valejo, California. Dan reports BOB MOSS '67 teaches at St. Andrews and SANDY OGILBY (our ex-prexy's son) is

~~~---=c~h;:;:aplain. Our classmate JAMES . .-PERRY, former

political and national affairs editor for the recently defunct National Observer, has changed jobs to that other branch of Dow Jones known as The Wall Street Journal, as their Washington Correspondent for P & Nl A. Jim and his wife will continue to reside on Wolfe Street in Old Alexandria, Va., along with daughters Greta (22) and Kathie (20), who are a senior and sophomore, respectively, at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Your Secretary has survived his fourth year as treasurer at the Postal Service (seems like twenty), built a new house (with self as architect and general contractor), in Mclean, Virginia, and in mid-August welcomed his trim wife, Lee, back from a month long back-pack trip through the wilds of Wyoming.

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

CLIFF STARK writes that his son, Douglas, will be playing varsity soccer as a freshman this fall at Houghton College. Houghton (New York) College soccer teams have been in the final eight in the national playoffs of the NAIA for the past two years. Son Jeff has completed his second year at Houghton as a music education major with his primary instruments being the trombone and piano.

ALEC SIMPSON writes that his daughter, Kate, has entered Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon. The Simpsons happily played host to The Rev. LEE MITCHELL for dinner along with JACK NETTEL and his wife, Sally, earlier in the year.

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

BOB and Syd BUFFUM are celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary this year, and as some additional timely news, their son, Bob, Jr., graduated in May from Trinity. That sure makes it convenient for reunion years, doesn't it, Bob?

DICK McCREHAN writes from Houston, Texas that after 20 years with Phillips Petroleum he has resigned to become district manager for Pioneer Corporation. Congratulations Dick!

JOE MOREHEAD received an unusual and unique award recently. At the American Library Association·s annual convention held in Detroit in June, he was awarded the First Annual Congressional Information Service/ American Library Association award for distinguished

contribution to the field of federal government documents.

DOUG HARVEY writes that he is now with ERDA in Washington, D.C.

BOB FARRELL has a new job with A.G. Edwards and Sons, stockbrokers, in Dunedin, Florida. Bob also has a new home in Clearwater.

JOHN WENTWORTH has been promoted to president of City Security Transport, Inc. in New York City.

JOHN WYNNE is currently senior vice president, secretary and general counsel of Chemical Bank in New York City.

A business which Your Secretary helped organize in late 1976, Stanislaus Soil Services, is achieving some modest success in soil analysis and consultation work with California ranchers and farmers.

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

EDWARD MITTLEMAN has recently moved to Beverly Hills, California. His oldest son started his freshman year at Berkley this Sept.

DIRCK BARHYDT, father of Caroline '79 is president of Waterbury (Connecticut) Pressed Metal Division and W.H. Armstrong Assoc., Inc . His community activities have been many and varied: the Connecticut State Easter Seal Society as director; President of the Board of Trustees of McTernan School; and was formerly a member of the Middlebury Conservation Commission.

54 Mr. Theodore T. Tansi Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. 1 American Row Hartford, CT 06103

Your Secretary spoke to JOHN CRAIG in July and he is now with the Pittsburgh Press. He has been there about six months and is enjoying it very much.

TOM HILL has moved his business, King Sales and Engineering Company, to Oakland, California.

DAVE FORD is currently national account manager, civil agencies, for Control Data Corporation in Rockville, Maryland. He writes that he has three children in college and says, "ouch."

LEWIS TAFT, who attended the spring alumni meeting in San Francisco, writes he was surprised at the large number of alumni in the Bay Area. He says that graduating the first of five from high school makes him realize the 25th reunion is creeping up. Lewis reports that JIM SAUVAGE has remarried and is living in Manila.

PETER NORMAN is now assistant to the dean for church and community relations, Seabury­Western Theological Seminary, Evanston, Illinois.

The Rev. GEORGE BOWEN is now rector of Grace Church in Newark, New Jersey.

STAN MUIRHEAD says he and his wife and four children are in their fifth year in agriculture and says ·he is especially grateful for Ohio State University's extension service help.

The Very Reverend CHARLES HENSEL is now rector of St. John's Parish in Decatur, Illinois, as well as dean of the Northwest Deanery of the Diocese of Springfield. He is in charge also of personnel for the diocese and works as a consultant to churches looking for a new rector.

JOE ESQUIROL has recently become judge of Family Court in New York City.

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

PHIL IVES writes that his firm, P.A. Ives and Associates, West Palm Beach, Florida, is deeply involved with a Florida based group to inform the American people about free enterprise and economic reform proposal called the "National Dividend Plan ." He has been on AL SCHAERTEL's ('56) national radio program, "Business Barometer," several times and says he would like to hear from others who are interested in stimulating the economy.

CHARLES SIMONS, a lieutenant colonel on active duty with the USAF, has been attending Air War College at Maxwell AFB, Alabama. His next assignment will be as chief of the Air Force section of the military group in LaPaz, Bolivia. He will have one year of enroute training, which will include Spanish, at Monterey, California, and state department foreign affairs seminar in Washington, D.C.

After two years of commuting, STEVE TUDOR has moved into the City of Detroit. Steve is associate professor of English at Wayne State University. He writes that his son, Michael, is specializing in the performing arts at Case Tech.

BILL KEATING has returned to business after seven years in college administration. He has organized American News Service, Inc., diversified printers-publishers, and Quality Distributors, Inc., home merchandising system, both based in Washington, D.C. His two oldest sons entered Haverford College this fall and the third, still in elementary school, is interested in Trinity .

ROGER SCHERER writes that he recently was

married to Joan Sutton. Roger ·is with Sanford Corporation of Chicago and is responsible for sales in three states. He has three children, ages 8, 16 and 19.

JOHN PALSHAW is now living and working in Pebble Beach, California. He and his wife, Judy, have two sons, David, 3, and Michael, I.

ED FITZPATRICK has been promoted to captain, U.S. Navy. He has a new job as director, international logistics, Naval Supply Systems Command in Washington.

PHIL TRUITT writes about an unusual group of Trinity alumni who have been getting together for the past 20 years at an annual tennis and golf tournament on Cape Cod. Faithful participants include JOHN and Freda SNOW '54, WARREN and Sue GELMAN, FRANK and Carol LUBY, SCOTT and Ann PRICE, DICK and Helen ZAMPIELLO, JIM and Julie PRICE '59, and Phil and his wife, Susie. Over the years others from the class have joined the group. Phil says the group has remained remarkably unchanged and has become more closely knit each year.

56 RIDLEY STUART has retired from the Air

Force, and is now living in Plattsburgh, New York.

BILL LAUFER, who retired from the U.S. Navy as lieutenant commander in 1973, is now executive director of the Japan America Society of Houston, Inc. and a director of Japan America Cultural Exchange Program, Inc.

ARNOLD PERSKY, a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force, is stationed at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. He is a staff judge advocate and previously served at the Pentagon.

57 Mr. Paul B. Marion 7 Martin Place Chatham, NJ 07928

Reunion (1977) seems to be generating some response from our more modest classmates.

STEVE BOWEN (Father of the Years as I recall) has been appointed director of corporate advertising and identity for TRW INC., Cleveland, Ohio. Steve will be responsible for TRW's corporate advertising program, which · includes television, radio, and print.

DUNCAN BENNETT, was recently named Salesman of the Year for TV Guide at the magazine's national conference in Palm Beach, Fla.

MAL MacDONALD, assistant director and editor of the University of Georgia ·· Press, Athens, Georgia, proudly relates that his family was chosen Athen's Family of the Year. The MacDonald household consists of Constance, editorial business; Randall, Eagle Scout; Alison & Ellen, b_uddjng ballerinas.

Morse

Vice president of marketing is MURRAY H. MORSE, JR.'s new title at UMC Industries, INC., Stamford, Conn. Murray joined UMC following four years as vice president and director of the Commonwealth Group, Inc. This was after twelve years with Owens Corning Fiberglass Corp.

Star Wars, forget about it. MIKE LEVIN has done it again. He has formed, Optigone Associates, Woodland Hills, California, which has exclusive rights to manufacture and sell a conversation piece that produces to true 3-D image in thin air. It's called "Mirage" and will start coming to national attention by the Fall of 1977. Mike should consider a political career.

JOHN SHIELDS says that any overworked executive should consult with him. John is president of Great Vacations, Washington, D.C.

Saudi Arabia was the country that BILL FREEMAN spent some time in recently pursuing his business of Graphic Design and Photography, (N.Y., N.Y.).

BILL LUKE is chairman of the Delaware Automobile Association Government Relations Committee.

MURRAY A. VARAT, M.D. was promoted to associate professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.

JIM MELROSE, M.D. is practicing internal medicine in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. (Take two shots of Coppertone and rest in bed.)

RICHARD BEHR as manager of Field In­formation Activities for Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania must be aware of the following classmate:

NEIL DAY is the executive director and general counsel of Medical Information Bureau at Greenwich, Connecticut.

H .B. BROOKS-BAKER is managing director of Debrett, which researches and advises on British Nobility. Classmate Brooks-Baker's N.Y. office has been swamped with requests following

the recent media interest in personal heritage. ROB WINSLOW indicates that he has in his

possession a rather interesting item of great significance to the Class of '57. (Not the Lemon Squeezer.) Rob, dean for educational services at Trinity, and our committee will reveal this treasured artifact at our Reunion. ·PLEASE ATTEND.

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

Several classmates have had a change of status or station in the academic world. BOB MC­CLENAHAN took over the position of head­master of the Country School in Madison, Connecticut, effective July I. RIDGE SAT­TERTHWAITE has left the Associated Colleges of the Midwest where he served as director of the Costa Rica Programs. He is seeking a new challenge outside academe, but one which might still have a Latin American flavor.

BOB BACK is now assistant vice president of Harris Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago. Bob's chief responsibility is that of an investment officer in the Trust Department with special interest in insurance, metals and mining. Also laboring away in the trust investment field is BUCK KISOR. He has left Paine Webber Jackson & Curtis in New York to join the Detroit Bank & Trust Co. where he is senior vice president and officer-in-charge of the Trust Investment Department.

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

Lieutenant Colonel MYLES McDONOUGH, deputy commander at Patrick AFB, Florida, has returned from an interesting two-year tour in the Philippines. His wife, Cynthia, and their three children especially enjoyed Florida during· last winter.

DON CABLES has been promoted to vice president of contracts at C-E Walther, Inc., a subsidiary of Combustion Engineering, Inc., Birmingham, Alabama. He will be responsible for project management, purchasing, proposal development, and estimating and contract administration functions.

JOHN MURRAY writes that he and his wife, Val, daughter, Donna who is 14, and son, Bruce who is 12, are in great shape. John is sales and marketing representative for Plastic Manufacturers Inc. in Philadelphia.

GEORGE HAMPTON has been named chairman of the division of behavioral sciences at the University of Houston. The division includes psychology, sociology and anthropology.

DICK PFLUEGER has been named assistant vice president for Johnson and Higgins, Pitts­burgh, Pennsylvania. Dick and his wife, Judy, and their four children, Bob, 15, Sue, 11, Abby, 8, and Mary, 6, live in McMurray, Penn­sylvania.

JIM HARROD is director of newborn services at Valley Medical Center in San Jose, California . Jim is active in singing and accompanying on the piano with the San Jose Gilbert and Sullivan Society.

JACK DONAHUE works as a buyer for Fluor Engineers and Constructors and is currently located in Esfahan, Iran.

RICHARD JAFFEE has been made executive vice president and treasurer of Recognition Systems, Inc., Dallas, Texas. He has also been elected to the board of directors of the cor­poration.

JOE SGRO, who is director of the applied behavioral sciences doctoral program at Virginia Tech, will teach in Maracaibo, Venezuela, Sao Paulo, Brazil and Santiago, Chile during this year.

Lomnitzer

Major DICK LOMNITZER of the 399th Civil Affairs Group, a Danbury-based (Connecticut) Army Reserve unit, took part in a joint operation in Putnam and Dutchess counties (New York) to provide studies and recommendations for county and local problems.

60 LAMONT THOMAS is currently teaching

history and developing an oral history project for seniors at the Sunset Hill School in Kansas City, Missouri. He is also working on a biography of Paul Cuffe, son of an African slave and American Indian. He and his wife, Margie, have two children, Bryon, 3 and Angela, I.

CHARLES BERGMANN is spending next year in Amsterdam, Holland. He is still practicing

. . . .. ... ... . -... ......... . .

Page 7: 1977September

architecture and has four children. KARL KOENIG is director of a day treatment

center at Bernalillo Mental Health Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico. He has just been · made professor of psychiatry and is already a professor of psychology at the University of New Mexico. His other activities include being vice president of the board of trustees of the Sandia Preparatory School, serving his second term on the Board of Psychologist Examiners and exhibiting his photography in several galleries.

PETER ANDERSON is an investment officer at the Girard Bank in Philadelphia. He writes that he did some upland grouse and pheasant shooting with BOB SPAHR and CRAIG CULLEN '61, which was not too productive but good fun.

PETER SCHMITT is the New York State district sales manager for SEW Eurodrive, an international manufactur-er of industrial gear motors and drives.

PETER STRASSER has been elected vice president of sales and marketing, Columbia Cement Company, Freeport, New York. He is also a director of the company. Peter has a son, Scott, 2 years old.

JOHN BASSETT has been appointed assistant professor of dentistry, University of Colorado School of Dentistry, Denver. He teaches part­time in addition to a private practice.

MARVIN PETERSON has just spent eight weeb in Germany on a Fulbright. He visited state and federal republic ministries and a variety of institutions. Marvin is currently director of the University of Michigan Center for the Study of Higher Education.

Students taking courses in theatre and dance as a part of the highly successful arts festival held on campus this summer had informal contact with playwright and screenwriter, LEE KALCHEIM .

61 Kerry B. Fitzpatrick 77 Prospect Ave. Sea Cliff, NY 11579

RAY HERMAN has recently accepted a position with the American subsidiary of Im­perial Chemical Industries, Ltd. as a senior pharmacologist. Ray and his wife, Sandra, are now residing in West Chester, Pennsylvania and expect their first child this September.

RICK BOARDMAN has been promoted to assistant general counsel of HoHman-La Roche, Nutley, New Jersey, as well as assistant secretary of the company.

AL MAYER has been traveling the world as president of Theodore Mayer & Brothers, Realtors of Cincinnati. He is currently working OI).Rr_9j,~<;ts in 1\!e l\l~therlands and Japan. AI was also elected Realtor of the Year for the Homes for Living Network.

BOB WOOD recently moved to Ithaca, New York, where he owns a VW Porsche Audi dealership on Elmira Road.

Major DICK GADD has been recently transferred to the Pentagon from Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Somehow the winters won't be quite the same.

PETER KILBORN, whose byline we hav.e seen so often in the New York Times, is now senior editor of Newsweek, serving as their business editor. I suspect he owes it all to Professor McNulty's Writing for Publication course.

DOUG FITZSIMMOMS is working for Mobil in their exploration of the UK sector of the North Sea. Doug lives in London with wife, Judy, and three children.

GENE REFALVY is now vice president and treasurer of ACLI International, Inc., com­modity merchants, in New York City.

Your Secretary was privileged to help with the Trinity Admissions Support Program this past year. If you are asked to help this coming year, I am sure that you will find it very interesting to come in contact with today's applicants and also gain some feedback about what is going on at the College.

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

With the advent of our 15th Reunion to be held on October 7-8-9, 1977, Your Secretary is pleased with the plethora of notes he has received. Our Reunion· Chairman, C. BAIRD MORGAN, JR. is looking forward to receiving your reservations for the Reunion Weekend.

ROBERT BOWLER is on a 15 month sab­batical from Cate School, Carpenteria, Ca . Bob is traveling in Britain this summer and plans to attend graduate school at the University of Canterbury, Christchurc~, New Zealand. In his spare time, Bob enjoys fly fishing.

JONATHAN G. GRANGER is employed as a trust officer at th~ First National Bank and Trust Co. of Naples, Florida, where he is responsible for fiduciary income taxes and estate taxes. Jon and his wife, Kaysie, made a bike trip to Cape Cod last summer to visit his parents. Their next bike trip will be to California in the summer of 1978. When he's not on his bike, Jon plays tennis. Jon and Kaysie are living at 4922 Hawaii Blvd. , Naples, Florida 33492.

JOHN KRAFT writes that he is back in school at the University of Pittsburgh, working on a degree in accounting. John and Mary Jo have two sons, John and Peter.

LARRY LEWINN is practicing plastic and reconstructive surgery of the hand in New York City where he is assistant professor of plastic surgery and director of the hand surgery clinic at New York Hospital, Cornell University Medical Center. Larry has received television recognition for his work in plastic surgery of the eyelids and

· for his work in reattaching amputated fingers. Larry and Maja have a daughter, Kaja.

JAMES McCONNEL has a new floating home and hopes to sail to Mexico this fall.

DONALD MacKAY has been rector of St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Billings,' Montana since 1972. The MacKays have five children ranging in age from 3 months to 11 years old.

FRED METCALF is extensively involved with drug education and diversion with adolescent offenders in Humboldt County, California. Fred is also teaching drug use and abuse courses at College of the Redwoods. His new book, "Telephone Hotline Counseling," published b} Lexington Books (Mass.), will be on the market this fall.

JOHN NORMAN completed his Ph.D. in higher education administration at the University of Connecticut.

PETER REINTHALER has been a correspondent at Lloyd's of London since 1974. In the same week, Peter's oldest child was graduated from college and the youngest from high school.

ROBERT ROXBY, who joined the University of Hartford last December as the director of Administrative Services, Division of Adult Educational Services, will now supervise the U of H program in part-time undergraduate day and evening courses, as well as the continuing education program. Bob has been instrumental in developing a course in conversational Spanish for mental health workers which has been in­stituted at eight Connecticut mental hospitals .

JIM SWEENEY was recently promoted to associate professor of history at the Penn­sylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania.

GEORGE WILL, winner of the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary, was the University of San Diego's commencement speaker on May 22, 1977.

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

STEVE YEATON is building a home on Kona Coast of Hawaii and is currently farm manager for Queensland Nuts, a 101/z acre macadamia nut orchard. His wife, Barbara, is a medical social worker for the State Department of Health in Kona. ·They have two children, Chris, 9 and Corey, almost6. . CARROLL STRIBLING is a partner in the law firm of Fordyce and Mayne, St. Louis, Missouri.

JIM WHITEHILL was fortunate enough to be selected to participate in the Institute on Nature and Society in East Asia at Earlham College in June. Sponsorship of the institute was the National Endowment for the Humanities.

CHARLIE McGILL has been promoted by W.R. Grace and Company to vice president for planning and development of their newly formed restaurant division consisting of 130 restaurants operated by Far West Services Inc. (Coco's Reuben's, Plahk House) and 25 Mexican din­nerhouse restaurants operated by El Torito­LaFiesta Inc.

MIKE LEINBACH lives in California's Sierra mountains and is president of Trimont Land Company, a subsidiary of Fibreboard Cor­poration of ' San Francisco. He says Trimont owns Northstar, a year round resort and real estate development project. Mike's daughter, Shannon, age 4, is the youngest skier on the slopes.

PETER KANE is credit manager with General Rental Company (Avis truck division) in Boston.

WATSON CAMPBELL has been promoted to vice president of Barnett Investment Services, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida.

Perreault

STEVE PERREAULT has been elected an assistant vice president in the property and casualty underwriting department of The Hartford Insurance Group.

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

DICK TOWLE has been elected vice president of Banking Systems Incorporated, Santa Clara, California and will also serve as president of the leasing division of BSI.

DAVE HARRISON has a new job as associate editor with Lawyers Cooperative Publishing Company, Rochester, New York .

CHARLIE KLOTZ and his family have moved

to London where he assumed the position of vice president and chief lending officer of The First National Bank of Boston- London.

JIM TWERDAHL's 8-year-old son, Tim, was best man at his marriage to Nanci Angell Hecker. Jim is currently vice president of Jensen Sound Laboratories and president of 1530 North Dearborn Association in Chicago.

JOE MARTIRE, currently on the staff of Union Memorial and Johns Hopkins Hospitals in Baltimore, is certified in both diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine. Joe also writes a monthly column for the Baltimore Evening Sun on sports medicine and has published 12 articles in various medical journals. His wife, Ivana, teaches high school English part-time. They have one son, Andrew, age 6.

65 The Rev. David J, Graybill 2B Cherokee Rd. Hendersonville, TN 37075

TOM GARSON is president of the branded division of The Lovable Company, New York City. He and his wife, Julie, have two boys, Tag, 7, and Michael, 4.

RICHARD GANN has been promoted to acting chief, program for chemistry center for fire research, National Bureau of Standards, Gaithersburg, Maryland.

ED LAZZERINI was the lucky recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for Humanities and spent this summer in Europe. Ed, who teaches Russian history at the University of New Orleans, conducted research and did some writing on the participation of the Muslim minority in the liberation movement which swept Imperial Russia during the early 20th Century.

JIM STONE says the new home market is too dear so he built an addition on his home in Louisville, Kentucky.

FRED DUENNEBIER has been appointed to the graduate faculty at the University of Hawaii as associate professor in geophysics. He is working on Viking Mars project and earthquake studies.

ANDY FAIRFIELD has a new job as assistant to the bishop for bush programs in the Episcopal Diocese of Alaska.

BOB STROUD is now section manager of edible oils in the buying department of Procter & Gamble, Cincinnati, Ohio. He writes that his four-year-old daughter, Carrie, has him in the palm of her hand.

ED RORER is currently executive vice president of Professional Capital Management, Inc., Philadelphia.

ALDEN GARDNER works as director of patient education at Lakeshore Mental Health Institute, Knoxville, Tennessee. He writes that he has given up marathon running for now but does some bicycle touring. This summer he went on a 400 mile trip on the Blue Ridge Parkway.

BERT FEINGOLD has opened his own office for the practice of orthopedic surgery in Scotts­dale, Arizona.

DOUG DRYNAN is director of internal operations for Grantree Furniture Rental Cor­poration in Portland, Oregon. Doug and his wife, Audrey, have two children, Becky, age 6, and Christopher, age 4.

PETER HAYES is currently pursuing his Master's degree in electrical engineering at Ohio State University.

JESSE WELLEN is a partner of Pacific En­terprises, San Francisco, a real estate investment firm . He has a son, 31/z, and a second child is expected in November.

HARVEY SILVERMAN was general chairman of the 1977 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing held in Hartford last May. Harvey is a member of the Computer Sciences Department of the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York.

BREWSTER PERKINS has been elected to the board of trustees of the Hartford Easter Seal Rehabilitation Center.

DICK SMITH is now in Ankara, Turkey on assignment to our embassy in the political military section. His wife is serving as an officer with the USIS cultural mission. They have a son, Carver, age 5.

FRED KNIER and his wife, Paula, their daughters, Sarah, age 10, Gwynnedd, age 7, and Alison, age 6, have moved into a new home in Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts.

TOM SNEDEKER is director of George Engine Company, Harvey, Louisiana. Some of his other activities are president of Junior Achievement, member agency committee for United Way, and restoring a 100-year-old house. Tom invites friends to call if they are in New Orleans.

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

It's been a good couple of months for notes from many of you, but there remain enough classmates from whom we haven't heard from in years to fill a small auditorium . What's hap­pening with all of you?

JOHN HEYL, who left the position of alumni director of Trinity several years ago to do fund raising for Harvard Business School, assumed a new, and what sounds like a fascinating, position

September 1977 Trinity Reporter Page 7

last spring as a special assistant for private resources at Woods Hole (Massachusetts) Oceanographic Institution.

Also in financial work, though of a slightly different kind, we hear that DAVE PEAKE was recently named assistant vice president of Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company in Philadelphia. Another insurance appointment is RICH FLYNN who last spring became manager of expense allocation in the corporate accounting department at the Aetna Life & Casualty Company here in Hartford.

Anderson

Still another of our financially oriented colleagues is TOM ANDERSON who was recently promoted to the position of a vice president at Hartford National Bank. Tom will also continue there as manager of the systems planning group of the Financial Industry Systems which is the bank's data resource management partnership.

In the academic vein, we hear that GEORGE BOYD was graduated this spring from the Dickinson College School of Law. Recent notes from our college faculty classmates tells us that PETE KOEHN was just promoted to associate professor of political science at the University of Montana, and CAL BRADFORD is at the University of Illinois, Chicago Circle Campus, where he is assistant professor in the College of Urban Sciences and associate director of the Center for Urban Studies.

On behalf of the whole class we congratulate TOM MITCHELL who recently received the "Bituminous Coal Research Award" from the American Chemical Society for the "most outstanding paper on coal or derived products" presented at the ACS Convention last year. Tom continues to serve as senior research chemist with Mobil Research and Development Cor­poration, Princeton, New Jersey, where his primary research at the moment is centered on coalliquification.

Also deserving of congratulations is STEVE PARKS whose first full length play, "Manby," was presented this summer by the Taos (New Mexico) Theatre Company.

We heard from three classmates this month who are directly or indirectly involved in real estate. KEN GEREMIA was promoted last February to director of public relations for the National Association of Home Builders in Washington, D.C. ED LEWIS is at the other end of the country in Marin County, California where he writes that he is busy and happy selling residential land and investment properties with the Grubb and Ellis Company. Finally in the real estate area we heard from ARNIE SCHWARTZMAN who is now vice president of the Schear Group, Inc., Dayton, Ohio, where he is in charge of real estate development, con­struction, property management, and com­mercial brokerage. Arnie says that he recently spent time in New York City with CARY JACKSON, and in Washington, D.C. with ELLIS RATNER. He apparently really gets around as well, because he wrote that he ran into JEFF DIERMAN recently in Las Vegas.

We heard from CHARLES FIORDALIS, whom ice cream lovers will be pleased to know, recently bought a Baskin-Robbins ice cream store in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Charlie is apparently busy, because he also serves as president of his own company, Medicomp, a medical laboratory testing center.

MARTY GALL, who continues to work as a research chemist at Upjohn Company, writes that he is chairing a session at the IUP AC meeting in Tokyo, Japan this September.

As we were finishing the notes for this issue, we got a call from CHARLIE BARRINGER whom, you may recall from a previous column, has been working in Niger for Texaco. Charlie is back in the States, and as of September expects to be here on at least a slightly more permanent basis. Charlie said he enjoyed the challenge of Africa but, as he put it, he is "happy to get back to some other aspects of civilization notabl~ by their absence in Africa."

That wraps it up for now; keep in touch, and again I remind you to send me the names of classmates from whom you haven't heard in some time and I will try and follow them up to see where they are.

67 Mr. Tom Safrah 943 1/ z Hilgard Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90024

Tenth Reunion is Octobet 7-9: It is hard to believe that our lOth yeau reunion is fast ap­proaching. All of you should have received by now invitations from BOB BRINKLEY and DOUG JACOBS. The ~eunion Weekend is scheduled from Friday, Octtober 7th to Sunday, October 9th. It 1;hould be quite an exciting time beginning with the class coo)<tail party on Friday night, the Trinity-William; football and soccer

Page 8: 1977September

Page 8 Trinity Reporter September 1977

games Saturday afternoon and a Reunion/Homecoming dinner dance on Saturday evening. I hope you filled out the personal profile for our class so we can have an updated directory for our class members. In addition, you should have sent your reservation back by August 31st to receive a free drink - the "Trinity Blitz." We Get Letters From All Over The World Department: TED RUCKERT sent a nice complementary letter from the U.S. Naval Regional Medical Center in Okinawa, Japan. He's been chief of OB-GYN at the U.S. Army Hospital in Okinawa for the past two years. He finally completed his military obligation last July. According to Ted, he found the experience to be rewarding both professionally and culturally. While running a very active OB service ("What else can people do at night with only one TV station in English"), he had the opportunity to travel extensively throughout the Far East, including Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Philippines, Malasia and Indonesia. By the time you read this, Ted will have taken a camping trip through the Northwest and located himself at 66 Buffard Drive, Rochester, New York 14610. According to Ted, "anyone passing through the area should avail themselves of the

. meager prices for room and board" at his house. Finally, Ted indicated he is eager to return to Trinity this fall for our lOth reunion. He is looking forward to seeing everyone after this first decade. So, let's make sure we go to the reunion and get to meet Ted and all our fellow classmates.

Another 'Ted" wrote from the East coast: TED HUTTON is enjoying the Washington metropolitan area where, as an associate publisher with Harper and Row in Hagerstown, Maryland, he is in charge of two departments and finds it very rewarding and challenging.

Also, in the D.C. area is PETER HELLER and his wife, Jane, who has become an associate of Covington and Burling. Peter has taken on a job as an economist with the International Monetary Fund. They are living at 3619 Fordham Road in NW Washington. BOB RATCLIFF just moved to 9001 Highland Drive in Adelphi, Maryland. He has been an attorney for the Federal Com­munications Commission since March, 1975.

Moving up the coast to Wilmington, Delaware is AL RAWS who has just been promoted to associate actuary with Continental American Life Insurance Company. Last fall AI became a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries. Also in Wilmington is DAVID ANDERSON who recently became a partner in the law firm of Potter, Anderson and Corroon. Promotions Department: MIKE McLEAN was promoted on April 1 to lieutenant commander (LCDR). He expects to remain as engineering ­officer on board the USS Robert E. Peary till February, 1978. After that his plans are up in the air. _

Also promoted in the Armed Forces is Lieutenant Commander RICK LUDWIG who is based at Miramar Naval Air Station in San Diego, California. Currently he is flying in Fighter Squadron 51 transitioning to F-14 Tomcats.

Up the coast in Los Angeles we find DR. THOMAS FLOOD, assistant professor of Chemistry at USC. Torn just received an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow for 1977-78. He was among 95 physical scientists and mathematicians chosen from colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada. Back In School Department: STEWART BARNES has just enrolled in the Harvard Divinity School, where he is studying theory and practice of Christian ministry. In West Hartford, MIKE CURCIO just received his Six Year Certificate from Saint Joseph College.

Down at the University of North Carolina at Greenboro, JOSH HOFFMAN wrote that he is now an assistant professor of philosophy. He and his wife, Ruth, have two boys, ages 5% and 2.

More and more people are moving to the South and Southwest. Our class is no exception. MIKE FERGUSON has just taken a job with the Office of the General Counsel for the El Paso Natural Gas Company. He and his family just bought a horne at 7617 Escondido Drive. DAVE GORDON and his wife, Jayne, and daughter, Megan, moved to San Antonio, Texas, where Dave is joining a group medical practice limited to the specialties of medical oncology and hematology.

Finally, PAUL SCHEINBERG has just com­pleted his stint in the Navy as Flight Surgeon and returned with his bride to Atlanta where he is doing a fellowship in pulmonary medicine at Emory University Hospitals. He expects to stay on next year, too, as chief resident of one of the hospitals in the Emory system and thus has bought a horne close in to the city.

CHARLES KURZ was recently in Los Angeles where he carne with his wife and "minus two week" child to launch a big new oil carrying tanker.

Finally, while corning back a few days ago from a short vacation to Colorado, I met WALTER HARRIMAN who had been travelling all over the country on business. Wally had a chance to meet a number of fellow classmates during his travels and has promised to give the updated scoop for the next issue.

In the interim, while waiting for the latest news, make sure you get your plans ready to attend our reunion on October 7th through 9th.

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

DON BARLOW teaches Spanish and government at Ovid-Elsie (Michigan) High School and also coaches baseball and cross­country. In addition he teaches tennis in the summer. He writes he started running distance races in the state and this summer chaired the Jaycee S-mile run in Owosso. Don says all classmates welcome on the way through Michigan.

DAVE BORUS has a new job as associate dean of admissions at Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana.

KERRY HAMSHER has received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology and joined the Department of Neurology at the University of Iowa as a staff scientist and clinical neuropsychologist. He has published several articles in neurology and psychology journals and has done various reviews. His wife, Carole, is completing her first year of medical school and this summer had a research scholarship in the Department of Ophthalmology.

STEPHEN DOME has been made assistant vice president of municipal bonds at the First National Bank of Chicago. His daughter, Sara Martha, just celebrated her first birthday in June.

SAM ELKIN is currently with Reed, Smith, Shaw and McClay, Pittsburgh.

DENNIS FARBER's paintings can be seen at _The Dobrick Gallery in Chicago, The Allrich Gallery in San Francisco and the Baum Silver­man Gallery in Los Angeles.

Fisher

BILL FISHER has been ' named associate counsel in the Law Department of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, Springfield.

PAUL GOLDSCHMIDT has opened a practice in periodontics with Dr. Stephen Miller in Southington, Connecticut.

BOB GLASSMAN is doing cardiology research at Columbia University until next April when he will return to the Department of Cardiology, Indiana University as assistant professor of medicine. He and his wife, Louise, have two sons, David, 3 and Stephen, 1.

KEITH MILES has a new job working on the President's reorganization project. This represents a leave of absence from Arthur D. Little, Inc., Washington.

RALPH OSER is with the office of general counsel, agency for international development, Department of State in Washington. He and his wife, Katherine, both love Washington, D.C. They spent a week in Caucurn, Mexico last spring and heartily recommend it.

BARRY SABLOFF has been promoted to assistant vice president in the consumer and industrial electronics division of the corporate banking department of The First National Bank of Chicago.

JIM SWANSON is still teaching psychology, history and self-discipline to 8th graders at Marin Country Day School in drought stricken Marin County, north of San Francisco. This summer he hiked 200 miles thru the bush of Alaska's Brooks Range. Future plans call for a return to Nepal for cultural and mountaineering experiences. Hiking this year took him to Haleakala Crater on Maui Escalate Canyon, Southern Utah, and Arizona'~ Sonoran Desert.

LARRY SLUTSKY is now practicing diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine at Community General Hospital of Syracuse, New York. He would like to hear from friends in the area. Larry lives in Fayetteville, New York.

JIM WILSON has completed his first year of residency in internal medicine at the Georgia Baptist Hospital, Atlanta. He and his wife, Donna, have two children: Eric and Pamela.

JOE McKEIGUE, principal of an elementary school in Boston, has received his doctorate in education administration from Teachers College, Columbia University. Joe and his wife have four children.

6 9 Mr, Frederick A. Vyn 19 Shoreham Club Rd. Old Greenwich, CT 06870

DIEDRICH AUGUST has been named a vice president of Dudley-Anderson-Yutzy Public Relations Inc., New York City.

MIKE LOBERG has been promoted to associate professor of medicine, pharmacy and medicinal chemistry at the University of Maryland. Mike's duties include teaching and research on new radioactive drugs for use in nuclear medicine.

LEIGHTON SMITH has gone into business for himself as an organizational consultant. He

August

assists businesses in organizing their accounts, personnel, inventories, promotions, etc. He also has a budding mail order business.

JIM SCHUMAKER has been assigned to the American Embassy in Moscow as ambassador's aide.

FRED STROOCK is now head of The Stanley Clark Middle School, South Bend, Indiana.

ANDY HILLMAN writes he has a rewarding job of running the religious school and three youth groups of the congregation, as well as directing the Judaica High School for the community and working with Reform Jewish teenagers across the Southeast. He and his wife, Carole, are building a new home in Longwood, Florida because more "visitor" space was necessary.

BOB SHERRILL has moved to Farmington, New Mexico and established an independent practice in clinical psychology and neuro­psychology. Bob's address ls 703 W. Apache, Farmington, 87401.

After graduation from Stanford Business School and a two month vacation in the Sierras, Pacific Northwest and Northern U.S., SCOIT DUNCAN has taken a position as a financial analyst with Dravo Corporation in Pittsburgh.

DAVE KNOWLTON, who received his Master of Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania in 1976, is currently working in Philadelphia at a drafting board not far from GEOFF WHITE '68 and JIM CORNWELL '70.

MARK DiBONA and his wife have left New York City for Exeter, New Hampshire where he has started a dental practice, and hopes to join the staff of The Exeter Hospital. He says country life is fine and they are even trying their hand at a little gardening and trout fishing,

70 John L. Bonee III 30 Foxridge Rd. West Hartford, CT 06107

ALEX BELIDA has left his new address in Munich, West Germany with the Alumni Office. He writes that he lives there with his wife Patricia Reber, whom he married on Septembe~ 4, · 1976. They met while they were students together at Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1971.

HAROLD BENCOWITZ has submitted the following: 1/1/75-12/31/76, residency in in­ternal medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; 7/1 / 76-12 / 31/76, chief resident,internal medicine, St. Luke's Hospital, Houston, Texas; 1/1/77-6/77, fellow, pulmonary diseases, Baylor; 7177, moving to Park City, Utah where he will finish his fellowship in pulmonary diseases at the University of Utah (Salt Lake City).

Professor Paul Smyth has suspended your secretary's membership in the Frye-Smyth Fan Club because of my misspelling of NorthrOp in the April issue of the Reporter. My reinstatement to be contingent upon the performance of a certain penitential rite: I must shout the phrase "Moby Dick, Moby Dick, Moby Dick" at a Russian fisherman while brandishing my clenched right fist at him in a foreboding manner.

BILL DAIBER is presently a full-time emergency room physician at the Community General Hospital in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. He was graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine in June, 1974.

GEORGE DUNKEL is teaching at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. He received his doctorate in 1976 from the University of Pennsylvania.

ALAN GIBBY has written that he is quite excited and enthusiastic about a promotion which he has just received. He starts the up­coming school year as assistant headmaster of The Lancaster Country Day School in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Since he hasn't submitted anything to the Reporter from the time he graduated, ALAN GLADSTONE has given us a thumbnail sketch of what has happened in his life since then: In March of 1974 he married Wendy Rossi; he was graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in May of 1974; he was then a resident in internal medicine at St. Luke's Hospital Center in New York City. Alan began a fellowship in cardiology at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City in July. When he completes his formal training, he hopes to practice medicine in Western New England. His wife, who is a resident in pediatrics, was ex­pecting their first child in June.

DAVID GOLDBERG has harkened to the call of the wild boar! He has moved to Jeffersonville, Vermont and has bought a farm in Fletcher, Vermont for the purpose of raising pigs.

TOM GRABER plans to move to Chicago to take on a residency in emergency residency. He

has just completed two years at the Harvard Primary Care Program.

CHARLES SAGER left the massive Citibank organization in November in order to see the other side of the financial world. He is now in a small organization where he works actively on a large venture capital portfolio.

DAVE SHIPMAN received his M.B.A. in finance from Wharton School of Business in Philadelphia in December, 1976. He is currently working for Haskins & Sells as a management consultant. He writes that JOHN McKINNEY is at Wharton working for his M.B.A. in the health care area and TOM DIGHT is still employed by Hilton Hotels but has been transferred to the Franchise Division in Walden, New York.

Professor Norton Downs has been kind enough to inform us that BILL NEWBURY published an article in the March issue of Horticulture.

71 ART ROSS is a resident in general and car­

diothoracic surgery at Duke University Medical Center. He plans a career in pediatric surgery.

ANDY LIPPS has a new job as an attorney with the Public Defender Service in D.C.

PETER MILLER has received his law degree from Western State University in California.

KEITH FUNSTON writes that to set the record straight he has not been appointed to the board of Metropolitan Life but is leading a relatively inconspicuous life in Boston as a management consultant for Arthur Anderson and Company. He sends news of the following: STEVE LINES (married to Mimi Adams) is at Harvard Business School; PETER LAWRENCE now works in New York for W.R. Grace and Company and is married to Sue Upton; SCOIT PHILLIPS! is an architect in Seattle; and MEL KENDRICK is achieving fame as an artist in New York City.

HUGH WOODRUFF has a new job as 'Senior research chemist at Merck Sharp and Dohme, Rahway, New Jersey.

On a business trip to the California desert for the U.S. Department of the Interior, PAUL SMYTH was able to visit ERIC AASEN '70 and ROBERT WILSON '70 in San Francisco.

On May 8th, KENT TARPLEY was clothed as a novice in the Order of St. Benedict at St. Gregory's Abbey, Three River, Michigan. He is pursuing study of the Hebrew Scriptures and Judaism.

JOE SMITH, who recently married (see Weddings) is practicing dentistry in Greenberg, North Carolina.

JOHN REALE, who graduated from Van- i •

derbilt Law School last year, is practicing law in Atlanta, Georgia with Swift, Currie, McGhee and Hiers.

TIM WOOLSEY has finished his doctorate in piano at the University of Texas and has been promoted to assistant professor in piano at Southwest Texas State University.

MARK MIITENTHAL is doing his surgical residency at Emory University Af-filiated Hospitals in Atlanta.

After a stint as reporter for The Hartford Times (now defunct) ED KARAM is copy editor with The Middletown (New York) Times Herald­Record. He also does book reviews for the paper.

BILL PREVOST is at the University of Penn­sylvania School of Veterinary Medicine. His new bride, Beth, (see Weddings) is a Master's degree candidate in food science at Rutgers University.

ALBERT and Shelia HUMPHREY expected their second child in late July. AI is with the U.S. Public Health Service with STUART HAMILTON '70.

BOB GARRETT writes he has completed his career changeabout this fall by entering the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine. His long term goal is primary care practice.

After completing his internship in internal medicine at the University of Oregon, HAROLD MORSE has begun a two year tour in Indian Health Service on a Hopi reservation in Arizona. Harold's daughter, Georgeanna, celebrated her first birthday on August 19th.

ED BOWE is now a resident in both pediatrics and anesthesiology at North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. His wife, Linda, has completed her first year of graduate school. Ed has had a paper accepted for presentation in New Orleans at the American Society of Anesthesiologists meeting in October.

DAVID SARASOHN has been named assistant professor of History and Humanities at Reed College, Portland, Oregon.

GARY ROSEN is doing his residency in family medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle.

72 Jeffrey L. Kupperman, M.D. 1600 Esplanade, #3 Redondo Beach, CA 90277

STEPHEN GYLLENHAAL is now president of Insight Films, Inc. in New York City. He writes that he intends to do everything he can to protect foreign countries from ROBERT LaROSE's '71 plans for subjugation.

LARRY GRAVES received his Ph.D. in math from Brown University and is now on the

Page 9: 1977September

consulting staff of Daniel Wagner and Associates in Paoli, Pennsylvania.

CHARLES YEAGER is the assistant D .A. in Rapides Parish, Louisiana and is a member of the board of governors of the Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association.

CARL PRATHER received his Ph.D. in math from Northwestern this spring and is now at V.P.l. and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia.

DAN REIFSNYDER has been working in the office of international fisheries, national marine fisheries service, National Oceanic and At­mospheric Administration since 1974 as ad­ministrative assistant to the U.S.-Soviet and U.S.-Polish Fisheries Conciliation Boards -seriously! Recently, he was promoted to the position of foreign affairs officer in the in­ternational negotiations division, after com­pleting his M.A. in Soviet Studies at Georgetown University. Dan writes that he saw ADAM WALMUS and wife, Beth-Ann, in D.C. on Adam's return from 18 months in Southeast Asia and before their departure on careers in public health and population dynamics. Dan also recently heard from DAVE McCLOUD (and wife, Bobbie), who is in Suva, Fiji in the Peace Corps after grad school at U.C.L.A.

Friedrich

BRAD FRIEDRICH was appointed to the position of research analyst at Hannaford Bros. Company in Portland, Maine .

CHARLES SHAW is teaching English at Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.

ROCCO MAFFEI is currently on active duty with the U.S.A .F. at Wright Patterson AFB as an attorney in the area defense council.

The Rev. CHARLES BELKNAP was ordained this past January and is now the curate at St. Johns Episcopal Church in L.A.

RICK MUNZ graduated as an officer in BSK schola.stic · honors fraternity and as a Nikon scholar from the Pennsylvania College of Op­tometry. He has just completed specialty ex­ternships in low vision and binocular function and hopes to spend next year as a staff member at the 0ptometric Center in Baltimore.

TOM SCHAIBLE received his Ph.D. in physiology from Rutgers and is now a post­doctoral fellow in cardiology at the Albert Einstein Medical School Montefiore Hospital.

GREG NEIMAN specializes in industrial real estate development and brokerage as a partner at Hawthorn Realty Group in Chicago.

Last January, WALTER YOUNG, D.D.S. opened his office for the practice of general dentistry in Richmond, Virginia.

BOB FASS was transferred from Pope AFB, North Carolina to Yokota AFB, Japan, with his new wife, Janet Lee Schob, of Fayetteville, North Carolina.

AL WINROW, who since graduation, has earned both a yellow belt in Sho-to-Kaan and an M.Ed. in a Boston elitist institution, spent the summer traveling cross country. During his travels he stopped in Telluride, Colorado to see )A Y GOODWIN, who was not home, as well as in southern California to enter the competition for the perfect tan at the Redondo Beach home of Your Secretary. Al will be returning to Malden, Massachusetts to teach junior high school reading.

73 Lawrence M. Garber 1245 Elizabeth St. Denver, CO 80206

DIRK DREUX has been promoted to com­mercial banking officer at Hartford National Bank, Farmington, Connecticut branch .

Dreux

HERB KEATING, who received his M.D. from the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center of The Pennsylvania State University last May, has begun his residency in internal medicine at Hartford Hospital.

ALAN HENSON writes that he and his wife, Linda, are coping with the transition from the relative bliss of medical school to the rigors of surgical residency, including every other night call schedules, at Case Western Reserve University Hospital. Even so, Alan says he still manages to find time for building Tiffany lamps

and wood cabinetry and to play some tennis and squash.

STEVEN BARKAN and his wife, Barbara, are living at Stanford University, where Barb is a graduate student in neuroendocrinology. Steve is working on his doctoral dissertation.

MIKE BATTLE has been commissioned a chaplain (1st lieutenant) in the U.S. Army Reserve. Mike serves as a counselor for Contact Teleministries, as chaplain of Hampton Institute and is chairman of the department of religious works at Hampton. He has completed his second publication entitled, "An Existential Approach to Counseling," Contact Journal of Awareness, May 1977.

Beginning with a Watson Fellowship in Russia and Europe studying theatre, JIM ALLISON has worked in various areas of the arts and this year has been director of Asta Theater, Washington, D.C.

GINNY BUTERA lectured this summer on "Patronage of the Arts" for the Smithsonian Associates resident program.

After graduating from the University of Cin­cinnati Medical School in June, ROBERT COITH is doing an internship at Christ Hospital of Cincinnati.

GENE CONEY has been promoted to un­derwriting supervisor in charge of the workers' compensation line at the Insurance Company of North America's Philadelphia office. His three­year-old daughter, Tamika Faith, says hello to KENNY and Shirley STONE's daughter, Kerri .

ELIZABETH HUNTER, who is in med school at the University of Pittsburgh, worked on a Navajo reservation in Ft. Defiance this summer.

SUSANNAH HESCHEL is pursuing a doc­torate in religion at the University of Penn­sylvania. In the same field is VAUGHAN DURKEE McTERNAN (see Weddings) who is working toward a Masters of divinity at Yale. Her husband, Kevin, is also a student at Yale.

-SUSAN MEAD graduated from SMU Law School last May and was scheduled to take the Texas Bar exam in July. Susan has purchased a new old house in Dallas.

After graduating from Vanderbilt University School of Law in May and taking the Illinois Bar exam, BOB BUTTERS is now working with the Bureau of Competition of the Federal Trade Commission in Washington, D.C.

JOSH KUPFERBERG writes that he is in the midst of his Ph.D. research project and, upon completion, will finish the two years left toward his M.D. MARK SPLAJNGARD received his M.D. from the University of lllinois Medical School and is doing his residency in Houston.

STEVE HOFFMAN, who received his M.A. in journalism in August of 1976, is working as a staff writer for the Bourcier Daily Camera in Colorado.

JANE LOVELAND-IGLAUER writes she is very proud of her husband's nomination for a grammy this past winter. She is contemplating doing some album production herself, either for his label, Alligator, or on her own.

After two years of teaching at Trinity-Pawling in New York, JOHN TYLER has returned to full­time work on his dissertation for a Ph.D. in history at Princeton. His first book, "Con­necticut Loyalists," has been published by Polyanthoes, Inc. of New Orleans, Louisiana.

PHYLLIS RAND and her husband, Steve, are living in Pittsburgh where Steve has a fellowship at Pittsburgh Children's Hospital.

KAREN HUESTON has finished her in­ternship at Ohio State University Hospital and graduated from the University of Virginia in August ~ith an Ed.D. degree. Her husband is in veterinary school in Columbus, Ohio. Karen would like to hear from other Trinity grads in Ohio.

LEONARD REED, who worked for the now defunct Hartford Times, is now general assignment reporter with the Dallas Times Herald .

GEORGE MAXTED graduated from Wayne State University Medical School in June and is doing his internship at Duke University Family Medical Program.

ALICE HAMILTON FARLEY received her Masters in landscape architecture from the University of Pennsylvania and is now working in Philadelphia as a landscape architect. She and her husband, who is an architect also, live in a Chestnut Hill carriage house.

GEORGE GONYER completed his MBA from Harvard Business School in June and is now a staff accountant with Ernst and Ernst in Scar­borough, Maine.

KEN STONE has completed his CPA exam and by now should be certified in Missouri and Illinois. His daughter just celebrated her first birthday .

ALISON CLARK has moved to San Francisco where her fiance is beginning a neurosurgical residency at University of California at San Francisco. Alison received a B.S. in nursing from Cornell in 1976.

DAVE SCHIRMER is a sales representative for Westvaco in Chicago.

74 )ames A. Finkelstein '74 50-56 Broadlawn Park -Apt. 306 Chestnut Hill, MA 02167

Summer brought good news hom many people. LYNNE BUCHWALD reports that she currently has a fellowship teaching Hebrew at

the University of Pennsylvania. She is working on her doctorate in ancient languages and has received a grant to study at Hebrew University next year. AL LEVEILLE is finishing up his third grueling year at medical school at the University of Chicago. Aland his wife, ANN FEIN '75, are celebrating their second wedding anniversary. Ann recently passed her prelims in human development at the University of Chicago.

DAVE SOLIS and his wife, Wendy Heymann, are now residing in Des Moines, Iowa. Dave has finished his first year at the College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery in Des Moines. FRED FRANCIS has finished his second year at Princeton Theological Seminary where he is preparing for the parish ministry. He spent the summer in Littleton, Colorado at the St. James Presbyterian Church.

LISA GRADY is starting law school this fall. She ran into CHAD MOONEY at an alumni dinner in Los Angeles. Chad is an account executive with Merrill Lynch in Los Angeles.

STACIE BONFILS has recently been trans­ferred by IBM from Washington, D.C. to Richmond, Virginia. A recent promotion to marketing representative prompted this major move. Her only regrets: no ice hockey and even less contact with Trin alums. If you are in the area, give her a call.

JOYCE BABB will be entering a master's program in social work at the University of Chicago this fall. Her primary interest is in working with young children and their families as a child therapist.

BRIAN McELENEY recently received an M.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama. DAVE TOLAND is presently playing bass guitar with the Jupiter Rey Band. He notes that "the fullest experience of life and the love that it is, comes from meditation ."

JAMES ROBINSON is employed at the National Bank of Detroit in the loan officer training program. Jim and his wife traveled in Mexico this summer with MIKE GETZ '75 and wife, and MARK CLEARY '75.

MALLORY M. H. KUBICEK and her husband, "CHIEF" '72, took jobs as musical director, percussionist and/ or actor for the Mettawee Theatre Company. The troupe worked with 15 foot high puppets as characters in their plays. The theatre company was in residence in Ports­mouth, New Hampshire during July and toured New England in August.

AMY TENNEY graduated from Duke Law School last May and began work for Rosen­man, Colin, Freurd, Lewis and Cohen in the litigation department this fall in New York City. Also in New York City is JON EMERY who is with the law firm of Brown, West, Ivy, Mitchell and Petty. Jon graduated from Boston University Law School last May.

NELL SMITH is a reporter on the Evening Sun in Baltimore. Covering a wide range of subjects from flying the Concorde to interviewing people like Virgil Fox and Tom Jones, she recently completed a 30-week series on nightclubs and discotheques.

Title

City

September 1977 Trinity Reporter Page 9

DON BELMONT has graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School and is doing an internal medicine residency at the University of West Virginia Hospital in Morgantown. JOAN DAVIES is currently in a Master of science, biostatic program at Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. She has worked as a data processor for a uterine cancer estrogen study in the Department of Epidemiology.

JOHN CLARK has spent a busy summer doing renovations in Philadelphia and its suburbs. Working on historical sites and doing some new construction, he has had a very satisfying vacation. SHAWN J3.USSELL g~aduated from med school in Jun.e and is doing a residency in psychiatry at Cornell University at Ithaca, New York.

DUSTY and MALCOLM ('73) MacCOLL report that they are living in a converted "chicken coop" in Gladwyne, Pennsylvania. Dusty is a department manager for Strawbridge and Clothier in Ardmore and Malcolm recently joined the investment banking firm, First Boston Corporation.

After graduating from NYU Medical College, GLENN PREMINGER, is beginning a residency in surgery at the University of North Carolina Memorial Hospital.

JAY MOLLER will attend University of California at Berkeley's Law School this year. For the past two years, he has lived in Briceland, California. CAROLYN HOSKINS has started a new job with Smith, Kline and French, Inc. in pharmaceutical research in Philadelphia.

RICHARD "Pancho" BRYAN had a very happy third year teaching at Charlotte (North Carolina) Country Day School. This year he was named chairman of the History Department and the varsity wrestling team he coached went 7-4-1. He recently entered graduate school at UNCC to attain a Master's in history.

WOODY and SUSIE ('76) BOWMAN are living in Princeton, New Jersey. Woody is enrolled in the Master of divinity program at Princeton Theological Seminary. Susie is a research technician in a genetics lab at the University. They are also involved in the N.J. Focus (Fellowship of Christians in Universities and Schools) ministry to private school students in the area.

KEITH CALLAHAN accepted a position as the assistant executive director of the Jewish Hospital of St. Louis, following completion of a joint MBA-MHA from Washington University. RON KAPLAN completed his third year of a rabbinic program at The Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio. This past summer, he served as a rabbi (in an internship) to a congregation in Guatemala, Central America. -

DAVID HOPKINS and his wife, Denise, are currently making their way through Ph.D. programs in Biblical Studies at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. Dave was recently honored by being named Hillel Fellow. WESLEY SAGER was best man at Dave's wedding on August 14, 1976.

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Page 10 Trinity Reporter September 1977

DON HAWLEY, JON EMERY, JIM FINKELSTEIN, and PETER GRAPE '75 joined CHARLIE MOORE '75 for a gala July 4th celebration in Annisquam, Massachusetts. An awesome time was had by all.

Well, the pen is a bit weary. This has to be the Class of '74's best representation in months -keep those cards and letters coming.

75 Mr. Gary Morgans 638 Independence Ave. SE#2 Washington, DC 20003

A lot of people have written in this month from many different areas. I hope a good number of '75ers will be able to make it back to school for homecoming this October.

From the north woods of Michigan, JEFF FORD writes that he is now a partner with Noggle Associates, an excavating and general contracting firm. Jeff, who has been a carpenter for the last two years, finished building a log home for himself last summer. There is no rest for the axe wielder, however, for Jeff was recently married, and will be adding on to make more room. Jeff says that he gets to see MIKE GETZ and ROB ROBINSON '74 every now and then when they venture out of Detroit's urban sprawl.

MIKE GETZ notes that he and his wife, Kathy, ROB ROBINSON and his wife Kiki, and MARK CLEARY also spent a week in Mexico last June. Mike made no reference to the allegedly in­tolerable conditions of Grosse Pointe Park.

TOM BRAY is still with the Social Security Administration, and is now a social insurance claims representative. Tom is living in Easton, Pennsylvania, but hopefully gets an occasional chance to journey to the hills of his native land, Palmerton, Pennsylvania.

In metropolitan Carlisle, Pennsylvania, BILL LEVY has begun his final year at Dickinson School of Law. Last year Bill was selected as a member of the National Appellate Moot Court Team at Dickinson. CARL SHELLY has also entered his third year of law school at the University of Pittsburgh.

MICHAEL POGUE is now working as a writer with Advertising Management, Inc., of Cin­cinnati, Ohio. He notes that he and his wife, Janet Asbury, have decided to forego children for a few years.

NANCY MOORE, who is pursuing a doc­torate in folklore at Indiana University's Folklore Institute, was recently appointed assistant editor of the Journal of the Folklore Institute. Nancy is most interested in maritime, automotive, American and Middle Eastern folklore.

DONNA EPSTEIN spent the summer relaxing after completing an M.A. in sociology at Northwestern University in Chicago. She will start a two year M.A. program in social development at the University of Chicago in September.

Donna was recently in touch with RONA

RICE, who is working on her MBA at NYU, with an emphasis in arts administration. CHIP ROME is also at NYU - studying theatre - and hopes to return to his teaching job in England if work permit problems can be solved. In Syracuse, DAVE and BETH (FERRO) MITCHELL are both working on their Ph.D.'s in biology. Beth's first article was recently published. Finally, Donna writes that she and BILL BARROWS '76 were planning to drive out to Aspen, Colorado in early September to enjoy the great outdoors before the fall term began.

Down in Fort Smith, Arkansas, KEVIN BAKER is working as a comptroller's associate for American Can. Kevin received his MBA in finance and accounting from the University of Chicago last June.

RUDY MONTGELAS has entered graduate school in electrical engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, and sends his regards to the temperate regions of the nation. Rudy has been working as an associate programmer in IBM's office products division.

In New York City, LYMAN DELANO con­tinues to work in the Personal Investment Management Division at Bankers Trust. Bankers Trust itself is becoming the Trinity of NYC, with GREG DUFFY, VICKEY TILNEY PAGE, ABBY COLLIER '76, and exchange student Allison Mellor recently joining the staff.

Back among the Boston contingent is POPPY OLIVE MOTLEY, who is an account coordinator with Hill, Holliday Advertising. Poppy is happily involved in a "low level" of advertising, and loves being back in Boston (and suburban Belmont for now). Her husband, George, should be starting his second year at Harvard Business School this fall, as will TONY PICCIRILLO, who reports that he is having a great time at the school. BONNIE ALEXANDRE is also, in town, and is working at Fanning Personnel in Boston, where DEBBIE DONOHUE used to work.

LIBBY HESS writes that she is living in Wilton, Vermont, and working in Burlington for the Vermont Department of Employment Security, finding jobs for people and people for jobs, and loving Vermont through it all.

Over in "beautiful, bustling, Bawlamer," STEVE BROWN has finished his second year at the University of Maryland Medical School. Steve is a Baltimore native. JEFF CLARK has moved to Washington, D.C., and has just entered graduate school at American University . In an · unrelated event, DOUGIE CLARK's name was misspelled in the last issue, for which we apologize.

SCOTT HA YIM and I are entering our third year of law school at Georgetown in Washington, and will soon be hitting the three piece suit trail. I spent this summer working as a law clerk with the Federal Power Commission's Office of General Counsel. While there I had the pleasure of meeting ED MARK '58, who is an attorney in the natural gas producers section, and BOB SHAPIRO '73, an attorney in the electric rates section.

I occasionally see ANDY WOLFE '73, who remains with the FTC. Andy is about to com­plete his first year as fire marshal for the 11th floor of his building, a year marked by not a single flaming incident. Several months ago I got a chance to see MATT MOLOSHOK '74, who graduated from George Washington University Law School last June.

GORDON BURKETT celebrates his first wedding anniversary to Terry Richards on September 11. Gordon has started graduate work in Computer Sciences at Northwestern and intends to go on for his Ph.D.

DAN REESE has been appointed director of Connecticut's Washington Office. His job is to keep Connecticut's Congressional delegation informed of the state's position on legislative matters and to lobby for that position as best he can.

Any news is always welcome, so drop a line and let your classmates know what you're up to.

76 Mr. Eugene Shen Fletcher Hall Fletcher School of Law and ~iplomacy

Tufts University Medford, MA 02155

Another eventful summer has passed and it would be interesting to hear from all of you about how you spent it. It is encouraging to see all the news that has come in so far.

Citytrust Bank of Bridgeport, Connecticut announced the appointment in June of NAT GIFFORD as a trust investment officer.

ANN CHESNES is at the University of Wisconsin in Madison doing graduate work in East Asian history and feels Madison deserving of the name "Mad City."

SALLY TARBELL is living in Toronto and enjoying the city when she isn't working on her Masters in clinical psychology.

If you have been to any rock concerts lately, you may have bumped into PETER HANSEN who is booking major rock acts in New England and the Midwest.

MARK ECKMAN has received his Masters in biomedical engineering at Northwestern University and has now started at Albany Med School in upstate New York.

After working for the Senate's Temporary Committee on Committees headed by Adlai Stevenson, JEAN BECKWITH is now at WPFW Pacifica in Washington, D.C.

JACK ORRICK has finished a year as a paralegal in Baltimore and is now planning to attend law school.

ANDREW BASSFORD is living in Hartford and frequently playing in a band called 'The Venturians."

BOB MESNARD has traveled to Italy twice in the past year and is in Washington for a year before attending law school.

LISA HEILBRONN is pursuing a doctorate in sociology at the University of California, Berkeley.

STEVE ALPERN is teaching environmental science and biology in the Baltimore City schools.

CHARLIE COHN spent the past year in England at the Worcester College of Oxford University studying European history.

SCOTT THOMPSON starts his second year at the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University after being elected secretary of the Business School.

LESLIE HYDE is in Boston working for Cahners Publishing Company.

After completing one year of study at Cin­cinnati Medical School, DAVID MERIWETHER says he's at the top of his class.

MARGOT JAFFE has finished her first year in the dual degree program at the Columbia University School of Dental and Oral Surgery and Columbia's School of Public Health.

JOHN GATES has been working as a special assistant to the Governor of Illinois, but says that the work and the travel have cut into his squash game and other social activities.

JODY SCALA was recently awarded a National Science Foundation Fellowship and will be attending Brown University after a year at the Marine Biological Laboratories in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

BARBARA SOBOTKA lived in Cologne, Germany since October of 1976 at a girl's home helping around the house and counselling on the side. She audited a few courses at the university and traveled quite a bit. She has now returned to the States to start the job search.

TERRI P ASQUINE continues her work at the Harvard School of Public Health as a research assistant in the Department of Nutrition. Her research involves the metabolic aspects of obesity with investigations carried out on genetically obese mice. She attends Northeastern University part-time, working toward a Masters in pharmacology.

Toby Chamberlain '78 was best man and Roger Schreck '77 was an usher at the wedding (see Weddings) of STEVE TRIGGS.

Speaking of weddings, Your Secretary was married to PAULA GALIETTE on July 23. PETER LEBOVITZ was best man - he spent his summer at the Continental Group, N.Y. in the Corporate Strategic Planning Division before returning to the Amos Tuck School of Business in the Fall. WILLIAM BROWN was an usher -he returned from the mountains and lakes of Maine to be with us. Debbie Donahue '75 was a

bridesmaid- she is now in New York working for the Little, Brown Publishing Company. CICJ CHICK was also a bridesmaid - she is a paralegal in Boston. ROB FERNALD was the organist - he was recently promoted in the Money Market of the First National Bank of Boston. CARLYLE FRASER was a Lector -he is working for a BMW dealership in Weston, Massachusetts.

Many Trin faces graced the celebration. HOBIE PORTER and CAROL MONAGHAN made the trip from Philadelphia. JIM GASCOIGNE and CHIP GOODE, made the trip from the Big Apple; JIM is in the Credit Department of Bankers Trust Company and Chip has returned to his own element in the Bean Town working for none other than Goode Fad, I mean Ford. GREER CANDLER, NANCY MOTLEY, ALISON KAYE, ELLEN MANN, and DAVID ROUNTREE made the trip from Boston. ELAINE FELDMAN was also there and is now back in school in Ithaca, New York at the Cornell School of Labor Relations. STEPHEN GARNER told us that he would be teaching history and coaching soccer at St. Mark's School. SUSIE LEWIS and Joe Kluger '77 returned to New York where SUSIE is in her second year at New York University's School of Law. NANCY OPENSHAW brought greetings from Rowayton, Connecticut.

ELIZABETH FREEDGOOD, who left our ranks for the University of Pennsylvania and graduated cum laude in Russian language and literature and an M.A. in Russian from there, is currently attending Tulane University School of Law in New Orleans.

It's hard to keep up with all the interesting things people are doing so please try to keep those letters coming in and relay news of others. Late news has it that CHARLIE STEWART made a trip to Manila in the Philippines with an im­port-export firm out of Pittsburgh. TOM SCHULTZ has found a job with a brokerage house in New York. GINO BARRA is helping his father out at Barra of Italy on Park Avenue in New York.

The 100th Anniversary of Trinity Football will be celebrated this Fall at Homecoming - hope to see you all there!

MASTERS

1937 HOWARD GOODY writes that little did he think after retiring four years ago from New York University that he would need to take a vacation from retirement every so often. Apparently he has many time­consuming interests and hence the need for vacations. _

1954 DON BATES Fas been named National High School Golf Coach of the Year, the highest honor for a high school coach. Earlier in the year, he was selected as­District 1 (New England and New York) Coach of the Year. Don has been a math teacher at the Berlin (Connecticut) High School for 25 years.

1958 FRANCIS ZAP ATKA has been promoted to associate professor of literature, American University in Washington, D.C. DON KUEHL has been elected president of Composite Technology, Inc., Broad Brook, Connecticut. The newly formed corporation manufactures boron filament.

1963 WALT McCLATCHEY spends his retirement in a mobile home at Laralake Estate, Sarasota, Florida.

1967 JUDITH SEDGEMAN, who is a reporter for the St. Petersburg Times, won first place for columns, second place for feature writings, second place for opinion/ editorial and third place for public service from the Florida Press Club. She also won the Distinguished Feature Writing School Bell award from the Florida Education Association.

1969 ELIZABETH STEVENSON, professor of foreign languages and literatures, at the University of Idaho, has been elected chairman of the University of Idaho Faculty Council for 1977-78. ED LORING has a new job as senior trust investment officer and director of research in the trust department at the Bank of Delaware. Ed has a new home in Newark, Delaware.

1970 After a long association with the Heren Press, STUART LAVIN has started the Four Zoas Press. The Four Zoas received its third grant in two years in literature from the N.E.A. and C.C.L.M. It has become a major poetry force with a shop in Boston and Ware, Massachusetts and a 30 acre sanctuary in Hardwick, Massachusetts.

1971 DAVID KNOWLTON has been named executive director of the New Jersey Optometric Association, Trenton, New Jersey.

1972 PETER BJARKMAN, who completed his Ph.D. at the University of Florida in December 1976, is assistant professor of English and linguistics at George Mason University in Virginia. Peter is currently working on a book on Cuban linguistics. He and his wife, Mary Anita, and their two children reside in Fairfax, Virginia. ALAN MILLER has been promoted to

Page 11: 1977September

curator in charge of The North Country History Center at State University College. His first book, "Photographer of a Frontier: The Photographs of Peter Britt," was published in December 1976. Alan's wife, Frances Ann, is children's librarian at the Plattsburgh, New York Public Library. VIRGINIA SHOTWELL is an adjunct professor of English at Indiana University Northwest and also adjunct professor of global history at Prairie State College, Illinois. FRANK CROWLEY has accepted a position as director of student affairs for the community college division of North Central University Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

1973 CAROLANN BALDYGA, assistant director, off-campus and weekend credit course program, Florida International University , was elected president of the 500 member Miami branch, American Association of University Women. She and her husband, an urban planner, have a son, Andrew.

1976 DAVID CAMPBELL has been appointed as pastor of the First United Methodist Church, Mystic, Connecticut. He is also serving as representative for the Con­necticut Valley District of the Southern New England Conference of the United Methodist Church to the commission on unity.

HONORARY

1962 The Rt. Rev. J. WARREN HUTCHENS, Bishop of Connecticut, has r-etired and was honored by the 193rd Diocesan Convention on May 17th with the establishment of a Clergy Children's Scholarship Fund in his name.

1975 CHARLES RYSKAMP, director of the Pierpont Morgan Library was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree by Union College this past June. LAURA JOHNSON, who recently retired as president of Hartford College for Women, has been named to the new Connecticut State Board of Higher Education .

IN MEMORY

DALLAS SUMMERFIELD SQUIRE, 1915 Word has reached the College of the death of

Dallas S. Squire of Los Angeles, California where he died April15 .

Born September 5, 1893 in New York City, he attended St. James School in Maryland and entered Trinity in 1911. While at Trinity he was a member of Delta Psi fraternity, the Glee Club, the tennis team and the Junior and Senior Prom Committees.

Upon graduation from Trinity he entered the insurance business from which he retired in 1959. Mr. Squire held memberships in the Los Angeles Tennis Club, the University Club of Los Angeles, and St . Anthony Club of the West.

RODERIC PIERCE, 1916 The Rev. Roderic Pierce died July 28 in Laguna

Hills, California . For over 46 years he served in pastorates in Endicott, New York; St. Michael and All Angels in West Endicott; Baldwinsville, New York; and Buckingham, Pennsylvania . After he retired, he did SJ!Pply WOJ;,k~and assisted -at' servic es in various churches until the Sunday before his death - a total of 57 years .

Born January 29, 1894 in Auburn, New York, he' entered Trinity with the Class of 1916, where he belonged to the Glee Club, was a leader in the Mandolin Club, and sang in the College Choir. He was a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity . He then attended the General Theological Seminary in New York City.

The Rev. Pierce is survived by his wife, Mrs. Margaret Griswold Hall Pierce; two daughters, Mrs. Mary V. Kelley and Mrs. Alice J. Allen; two sons, The Rev. Roderic H. Pierce and Norton T. Pierce; and twelve grandchildren.

KENT SHIRLEY KIRKBY, 1917 KentS. Kirkby died July 23, 1977, at his home

in Allentown, Pennsylvania, at the age of 81. Born in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, he at­

tended the Salisbury (Connecticut) Preparatory School. He entered Trinity with the Class of 1917. While at Trinity he was a member of Delta Phi fraternity and editor-in-chief of the Trinity TRIPOD.

After leaving Trinity, he worked for many years for the Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. in Hartford. In 1937, Mr. Kirkby founded his own insurance agency in Allentown.

Mr. Kirkby leaves his son Evans Kirkby, and four grandchildren .

JOSEPH PATRICK FOLEY, 1923 Joseph P. Foley, retired president of Foley

Travel Inc. of Hartford, died July 14 in Hartford. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mabelle Barnes Foley.

Born in Hartford October 24, 1895, he lived in West Hartford 34 years, founded the travel agency in 1926 and retired last May.

Mr. Foley entered Trinity with the Class of 1919, and was graduated from the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. in 1921.

A World War I Army veteran, he was a member of the Disabled American Veterans Unknown Soldier Chapter 12 of Hartford, Council 11 Knights of Columbus of Hartford, and the Hartford Lodge of Elks. He was also a member of American Society of Travel Agents and New York Bons Vivants Inc.

WILLIAM FABIAN WALSH, 1926 William F. Walsh, 77, died suddenly in

Tucson, Arizona, on July 6. He was a resident of Alamos, Mexico, for the past 20 years. Before his retirement, he was a partner in a New York City law firm.

Mr. Walsh was born in Portland, Connecticut. He entered Trinity with the Class of 1922, and received his law degree from Fordham School of

Law. While at Trinity he was a member of the Psi Upsilon fraternity, chairman of the Fresh­man-Junior Banquet, Class Senator and the assistant manager of the baseball team.

Mr. Walsh is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy (Prescott) Walsh.

OSWIN HEMAN DOOLITTLE, 1928 Oswin H. Doolittle, a former Hartford teacher

and president of the former Property Owners Service Corp. of Farmington, Connecticut died June 30 at Yale-New Haven Hospital.

Born July 15, 1906 in Willimantic, Con­necticut , he lived in Wethersfield many years. He taught in the Hartford school system 30 years, most recently at Bulkeley High School. He was a statistician for the State Labor Department for 12 years before his retirement in 1976. He also served part-time from about 1960 until 1974 as president of the Service Corp. , an engineering consulting firm.

Mr. Doolittle graduated from Trinity with a BaGhelor- oh.£cience-degree in 19-28:-He was- a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. In 1929 he received his Master of Science degree from Harvard University .

A former member of the Wethersfield Plan­ning and Zoning Commission, Mr. Doolittle attended Central Baptist Church and was president of the Civil Air Patrol Flying Club, Brainard Field Chapter.

Mr. Doolittle leaves two sons, Sherwood P. and David B. Doolittle, a daughter, Mrs. Rollin Tingely and 12 grandchildren .

NORMAN HUBBARD GILLETTE MOORE, 1936

Norman H.G . Moore, 64, died at home in Barrington, Rhode Island, on February 23. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Mr. Moore at­tended the Loomis Institute in Windsor, Con­necticut. He entered Trinity with the Class of 1936. During his Trinity career, Mr. Moore was a member of the varsity football and cross country teams. He was a member of the Delta Phi fraternity .

He worked for International Business Machines Corp. for over 34 years in various capacities, and retired in 1970 as a manager in their Data Processing Department.

Mr. Moore leaves his wife, Mrs. Sarah C. Porteus Moore, and four children.

PHILIP BAYER, 1938 Philip Bayer, 60, well-known in CIVIC,

religious, charitable and legal activities in Manchester, Connecticut, died July 12 at Cape Cod Hospital, Hyannis, Massachusetts while on vacation.

He was the senior partner in the Bayer, Phelan and Squatrito law firm in Manchester and served as town counsel from 1959 to 1961.

Born in New Britain, he attended Weaver High School in Hartford. He graduated from Trinity in 1938 and from the former Hartford College of Law in 1941.

Mr. Bayer was president of Temple Beth Shalom from 1963 to 1965, and was a member of the Temple's board of trustees. He was a leader in the United Jewish Appeal, the Israel bond drive and the Anti-Defamation League. In 1973 he and his wife received the State of Israel bonds Shalom A ward for devoted service to Israel.

He was a former prosecutor for the Town Court of Manchester, and had served as chairman of the March of Dimes and Cancer Fund drives in Manchester.

He served as president of the Manchester Bar Association and belonged to the federal, state and county bar associations.

Mr. Bayer is survived by his wife, Mrs. Lillian Siegal Bayer; a son, Aaron Seth Bayer; and a daughter, Mrs. Linda Niki Bayer.

PAUL CONVILLE JORDAN, 1942 Paul C. Jordan of Tucson, Arizona, a former

lieutenant colonel in the United States Air Force, died January 5.

Born in Hartford on March 24, 1919, he graduated from Hall High School in West Hartford and entered Trinity with the Class of 1942. He was a member of Alpha Tau Kappa fraternity.

He entered the service in 1942 and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel before his retirement in 1962. He received his B.A. degree from the University of Maryland in 1960. After retirement from the service, he taught at Fickel Junior High School in Tucson, Arizona .

Mr. Jordan is survived by his wife and four children.

ROBERT HOWELL SCHUMANN, 1942 Robert H. Schumann, chairman of the English

Department of The McBurney School in New York City, died on January 7 at Roosevelt Hospital. For over twenty years he served the school as a teacher and adviser.

Mr . Schumann was born in Malden, Massachusetts, on September 19, 1920 and attended Wakefield High School in Wakefield, Massachusetts. He entered Trinity in 1938. Upon graduation he went on to earn a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Nashota House in Nashota, Wisconsin in 1945 and was ordained an Episcopal priest. He received his M .A. from Columbia University in 1959.

In 1957 Mr. Schumann began a joint career as an English teacher at McBurney and as an assistant at the Episcopal Church of St. Mary the Virgin in New York City. .

He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Joseph H. Schumann.

CAROL RUTH ST. CYR, MA 1949 Carol R. St. Cyr, a prominent educator, died

on April 5 in Arlington, Virginia. For over 20 years she was professor of education, the School of Education, at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Born in Meriden, Connecticut, she received the Bachelor of Science degree from Willimantic State College in 1946, the Ma~ter of Arts degree from Trinity in 1949, and in 1955 earned her Ph.D. from the University of Michigan.

Previously she had taught in the Meriden elementary schools, was a research assistant at the University of Michigan and a visiting professor at the University of North Carolina .

Her associations included listings in Who's Who of American Women, Leaders in Am~rican Science, Dictionary of International Biography and Who~s. Whoin.Americ.an Education. Dr-, St. Cyr was a past president of the National Aerospace Education Association in Washing­ton, D.C. She was the first woman to hold this elected post in the history of the 20-year-old organization, whose membership provides national leadership and guidance in all aspects of aerospace education.

Survivors include her parents, Mr. and Mrs . Donald J. St. Cyr and her sister, Mrs. Jane S. Nicholson.

WILLIAM FRANCIS MAURER, 1951 William F. Maurer, 49, died May 17 at a

Morristown, New Jersey hospital. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Anna Doyle Maurer; three sons, William F. Maurer, Jr. , Robert D. Maurer and Scott E. Maurer.

Born in Hartford, he entered Trinity in 1947. He was a metallurgist for 24 years with Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Group in East Hartford.

Mr. Maurer served in the Navy during World War II, and was an Army veteran of the Korean conflict. He was a member of St. Christopher's Church in Parsippany, New Jersey, where he resided at the time of his death .

ABRAHAM JEHIEL FELDMAN, HON. 1953 Dr. Abraham J. Feldman, ecumenist, national

spokesman for American Jews, civic leader, author and rabbi at West Hartford's Temple Beth Israel for 52 years died July 21. He was 84.

He was known throughout the country as a champion of liberal, Reform Judaism, serving on every national Reform board.

A native of Kiev, Russia, he earned a bachelor's degree from Cincinnati University in 1917 and later degrees of bachelor of Hebrew literature and an honorary doctor of divinity from the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati.

He was also recipient of honorary degrees from Hartt College of Music, University of Hartford, Parsons College and Trinity .

Rabbi Feldman served in temples in New York City, Georgia and Philadelphia before coming to Hartford.

In 1973 the Trustees of the Congregation Beth Israel commemorated his 70th birthday, his 45th wedding anniversary and the 45th year of his ordination by establishing scholarships in his name at Trinity and the University of Hartford.

Formal recognition of his contributions by civic and religious groups included the American Jewish Committee Human Relations Award (1973), the City Council's City of Hartford Medal (1968) , the National Conference of Christians and Jews Award (1969) and Freedom Foundation Awards (1956, 1958 and 1975).

His national reputation brought him in­vitations from the White House on several oc-

September 1977 Trinity Reporter Page 11

casions and two missions to Hawaii and the Far East for the U.S . Defense Department.

Rabbi Feldman is survived by his wife, Mrs. Helen Bloch Feldman; a son, Daniel B. Feldman; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Norwood and Mrs. Jerome W. Mecklenburger; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren .

PETER MacGREGOR FRASER, Hon. 1955 Peter M. Fraser, former president and

chairman of Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. , died May 31 in Hartford.

Born March 10, 1891 in East Orange, New Jersey, he attended public schools in Newark, New Jersey and Brooklyn, New York.

He began his career with Connecticut Mutual Life as a co-general agent in 1918 and, after four years, became a general agent. He advanced to vice president in 1930 and a year later was elected to the board of directors. In 1945 he became president and retained that position until 1955, when he became chairman of the com­pany. After retiring in 1957, he continued as a director until 1970 when he joined Connecticut Mutual Life's advisory council, where he served for the next four years .

Mr. Fraser formerly held directorships at Connecticut Bank & Trust Co ., Heublein Inc., the former Phoenix Fire Insurance Co ., and United Technologies Corp.

At the time of his death, he was chairman of the executive committee and a director of Mohasco Industries, New York.

For many years, Mr. Fraser was president and director of the Newington (Connecticut) Children's Hospital and a director of Hartford Hospital. He was a former member of Con­necticut's Finance Committee and the State Prison Parole Board. In the 1940's, Mr. Fraser was chairman of the Red Cross War Fund and president of the Community Chest War Fund.

In 1955 Trinity awarded him an honorary doctor of law degree. He also received an honorary doctor of law degree from the University of Miami and an honorary doctor of science degree in business administration from Clarkson Memorial College of Technology.

Mr. Fraser is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mable Wark Fraser; a son, Peter M . Fraser, Jr. ; a daughter, Mrs. Frank Alberts; a granddaughter and two great-grandchildren.

JANET ANNE YELLEN, MS 1962 Miss Janet A. Yellen, 42, of Bethesda ,

Maryland, died on May 23 in Washington, D.C. Born in Hartford, she lived in Glastonbury for many years before moving to Bethesda.

_ .._She _received. her .undergraduate degree from­the College of New Rochelle, and was graduated from Trinity College with a Masters degree in mathematics.

At the time of her death, she was with the research department of the National Bureau of Standards, Technical Analysis Division. Miss Yellen was a member of the Association of Computing Machinery, Washington Operations Research Council.

Miss Yellen leaves her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yellen; a brother Kenneth Yellen; and a sister Mrs. William Peterson.

LOREN EISELEY, HON. 1975 Loren Eiseley, anthropologist, educator and

author, died July 9 in Pennsylvania . The recipient of numerous honorary degrees, he was awarded a Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Trinity in 1975. At the time of his death, he was the Benjamin Franklin and University Professor of Anthropology and History of Science at the University of Pennsylvania.

Born in 1907 in Lincoln, Nebraska, he graduated in 1933 from the University of Nebraska. While a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania, he developed an interest in anthropology. After teaching at the University of Kansas and Oberlin, Dr. Eiseley joined the faculty of the University of Penn­sylvania in 1947. In addition to his faculty position there, he was a curator at the University Museum, and served as provost of the University from 1959 to 1961.

Dr. Eiseley' s national reputation was established through his books. They included "The Immense Journey" (1957), "Darwin's Century" (1958), "The Firmament of Time" (1960), "The Unexpected Universe" (1969), "The Night Country" (1975), and his autobiography "All the Strange Hours" (1975). A collection of his poetry will be published in the fall .

Dr. Eiseley is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mabel Langdon Eiseley.

WILLIAM STREIT CUNNINGHAM, 1976 William S. Cunningham, of Watertown,

Connecticut, died suddenly at Waterbury Hospital on June 6.

Born in Waterbury on December 8, 1952, he graduated from the McTernan School in Waterbury and Taft School, Watertown. A transfer student from the University of Rochester, he entered Trinity with the Class of 1976. While at Trinity he was a member of the varsity hockey team. He was presently attending Waterbury State Technical School.

Mr. Cunningham is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph I. Cunningham and a sister, Mrs. H.R. Wofford .

Page 12: 1977September

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Page 12 Trinity Reporter September 1977

Rebuilding Defense Key To Varsity Football Success

In 1976 the Trinity football Bantams used many untested and inexperienced players in producing a highly respectable 6-2 record. They were undefeated halfway through the season after handing Middlebury its only loss of the year. Only an upset loss to Colby and a still-unbelievable Wesleyan game were low points of the season.

The competition this year is the same as last, and it is sure to be just as tough and exciting. The atmosphere surrounding the team in blue and gold will be heightened by the 100th anniversary celebration. It is indeed fitting that this year's Re­union/Homecoming Weekend op­ponent is Williams College. This rivalry is the oldest among Trinity's present competition, dating back to 1884.

The 1977 Trinity College varsity football team has 29 returning let­termen, ten of whom were starters (six offense, four defense) on last year's team. The graduation of 19 seniors hurts the Bantams most defensively, particularly in the secondary where three starters and three reserves were seniors. Also, two defensive ends must be found to fill the positions left by Grabowski and Uluski, two of the 1976 captains. Offensively, the other captain, fullback Pat Heffernan, has also graduated; his vacancy is a big one as he was the leading ground gainer for Trinity in each of the past three seasons.

The Trinity defense has been im­pressive over the past two seasons. In 1976 it had a chance of breaking several College defensive records (least first downs, yards rushing) until the disappointing final game against Wesleyan. Much rebuilding will be needed this year if the excellent per­formance is to continue.

Only senior co-captain Dave Poulin, defensive tackle, and junior Barry Dorfman, middle guard, return as starters in the defensive line. Jack McDonald, who missed all of last season with a knee injury, will compete for the other tackle spot with fellow senior Dave Henderson. The defensive end positions are wide open; com­peting for those spots will be senior Jim Leone, juniors Jim Davis and Jim Silvestri, and sophomores Jeff Mather and Gene Russell. Mather was the outstanding defensive player on last year's 4-1 frosh team.

Junior Joe Delano returns as linebacker, but the status of the other linebacker position in the Bantam's 5-2 set is uncertain. Mike Leverone, who led the team in tackles from that spot in 1976, is eligible to play, but has not yet made a decision whether or not he will. Without Leverone, top competitors for the position will be Brian O'Donoghue '78 (knee injury caused him to sit out last year) along with sophomores Meyer, YarnalL and Blake.

The only returning defensive back with any experience is junior John Flynn, a starter for most of 1976. Floyd Monroe '78 will be joined by juniors Bruce Shea, Bill Irving, Hank Bouhuys, and sophomores Bob Almquist and Tom McGowan in competition for the other three secondary positions.

The Bantam's multiple formation offensive attack will be under the directio~ of quarterback Mike Foye '79, who as a sophomore led the team in passing while serving as the number two signal caller. Senior Rob Claflin will remain as a backup quarterback, but will see primary duty as a running back or receiver .

Despite the loss of Heffernan, the Trinity running attack will be strong in 1977. Returning seniors Mike Brennan and Larry Moody will be joined by Claflin, Paul Votze '79, and Jim Rickert '80 in the Bantam backfield.

Marc Montini '78 will return as tight end; his speed is uncommon for that position. The split end spot, vacated by speedster Tom Lines, is open with intense competition expected among senior Jim Smith, junior Bill Mc­Candless, and sophomore Pat Mc­Namara.

Co-captain Karl Herbst '78 will lead the offensive line from his left tackle position. Other returning starters are right tackle John Doldoorian '78 and right guard Tom Heffernan '78. Junior Scott Ramsay is the top candidate for the other guard position. Most of the offensive line backup roles will be filled by sophomores. The center position will be played by either junior Tom Johnson or sophomore Steve Sullivan.

Mike Brennan will again handle the punting chores for Trinity, while Bill McCandless will do the placekicking. In 1976 McCandless led the team in scoring with 38 points; he used his unorthodox but accurate technique to tie Mike Maus' record of three field goals in one game in the win over Middlebury.

RAY PICKS 'EM With courage and conviction, Ray Montgomery '25 has taken the historical occasion of the 100th anniversary of football at Trinity to compile his all-time Bantam team. (Ed. note: no comment except to suggest that flak, etc. be directed to our fearless friend at North Racebrook Road, Woodbridge, CT 06525 although he has probably already headed for the hills!)

OFFENSE DEFENSE Hobart W. S. Cook 1912 QB Frank L. Wilcox 1880 QB Robert H. Alexander 1956 QB Hobart W. S. Cook 1912 QB Charles C. Sticka 1956 HB Augustus J. Lyman 1878 HB David Kiarsis 1971 HB George V. Brickley 1919 HB Milton L. Kobrosky 1937 HB William A. Barber 1887 HB Robert G. Johnson 1960 HB Christopher Max 1975 HB Theodore C. Hudson 1914 FB Theodore C. Hudson 1914 FB George V. Brickley 1919 FB Charles C. Sticka 1956 FB A. Lloyd Gildersleeve 1911 E Owen Morgan 1906 E Richard L. Garrison 1951 E A. Lloyd Gildersleeve 1911 E Sidney A. Mills 1941 E Richard Uluski 1977 E Ronald Duckett 1974 E John Strawbridge 1895 E Joseph J. Shannon 1887 T WilliamS. Langford 1896 T Lucius J. Kellam 1935 T J. Clinton Landefeld 1907 T WilliamS. Langford 1896 T Edwin J. Donnelly 1908 T Edwin J. Donnelly 1908 T Mitchel E. Holmgren 1949 T E. Kent Hubbard, Jr. 1893 G E. Kent Hubbard, Jr. 1893 G Richard D. Lindner 1940 G Richard D. Lindner 1940 G Frederick B. Castator 1916 G AlbertK. Will 1942 G Albert K. Will 1942 G Frank M. Lentz 1955 G James A. Lord 1898 c Roger Le Clerc 1960 c Roger Le Clerc 1960 c Lambert R. Oberg 1951 c William M. Vibert 1952 K Michael Maus 1976 K

SENIOR FOOTBALL CO-CAPTAINS Dave Poulin (78) and Karl Herbst (67) with head coach Don Miller. Poulin anchors the defensive line from his tackle position and Herbst does the same for offensive line.

Women's Crew Begins Second Varsity Season

The women's crew has a new coach In 1977 the Bantam hooters will be a

and a schedule of five regattas as it D III b f th .., ivision mem er o e same prepares for the 1977 fall season, its

league'. playt"ng the same schedule of second year of varsity competition. Andy Anderson '75 is the women's opponents, Trinity has a good chance coach, having returned to Trinity last to equal or better last season's record. spring to coach the men's freshman The loss of only five seniors (three

starters) to graduation should hurt crew. His freshman program was quite successful, with the lightweights more offensively than defensively.

The three captains return as starting winning a national championship at halfbacks. Alec Waugh, who recorded the Dad Vail Regatta. two shutouts in 1976, returns to the

The crew will have the month of goal. Last year's defensive unit was September to prepare for their com- young and inexperienced, allowing 25 petitive season which begins with a full oals agains..t, but will be stronger this slate on the secona weekend of o·~c----nseason. Big senior Bill Dodge, junior tober. Jeremy Meyer and sophomore Joe

On October 8 the Bantam women Capasso will key the back line. - y will journey north on the Connecticut senior center forward Greg Madding River to Holyoke, Massachusetts for returns as an offensive starter. The the Greater Holyoke Regatta . Coach wing positions are wide open and Anderson will take his team south to many players, including some Middletown, Connecticut on the very incoming freshmen, will be given the next day for the Head of the Con- opportunity to make the starting necticut Regatta. Last year Trinity was offensive unit. awarded first place medals for their Experience and depth should allow performance in the Holyoke com- Trinity to achieve soccer success in petition which was not completed 1977; the level of this success will because of wind and rain. depend upon Shults' ability to develop

The following Saturday, October an effective offensive attack. 15, will see Trinity hosting the women's crew from Simsbury High School. The only other home contest for the Trinity oarswomen will be the Goodwin Cup Race on October 29 against crews from Barnard College and Mt. Holyoke College. In between the two home regattas, Trinity will travel to Cambridge, Massachusetts to participate in the traditional Head of the Charles Regatta.

The 1977 women's crew outlook is bright as there was only one senior on the 1976 crew. Captain Anne Fickling '79 will lead the experienced oars­women in enthusiastic preparation for the upcoming season.

Varsity Soccer Seeks Continued Improvement

This year's varsity soccer team wlll have a lot of leadership and experience in the fO'rm of eight seniors, including tri-captains Aaron Thomas, Tom Lenahan, and Mike Kluger. In 1976, Coach Robie Shults' first varsity year, the Bantams produced a fine 7-4-1 season, the first winning Trinity soccer season since 1970. At the end of the fall they were ranked #10 in Division I of the New England Intercollegiate Soccer League.

Optimistic Outlook For Women's Tennis

Coach Jane Millspaugh looks for­ward to the 1977 women's tennis season with cautious optimism. There is a great deal of talent among the 30 women who have been selected for the varsity and junior varsity squads, and the competition is so intense that Millspaugh is not sure whom her top players will be.

Sophomores Wendy Jennings and Betty Wallace head the list of returning players. Only one senior graduated from last year's team, which finished with a 9-2 record and second in the New England Intercollegiate Tour­nament, but two of the top four players will not be on the team this fall .

With the season opening in Sep­tember, a major goal will be to beat Williams, the team which narrowly defeated Trinity for the New England championship in 1976.

ALUMNI!V ARSITY

HOCKEY GAME

The "big" game is scheduled for Saturday, November 19 at 7:30 pm at the Glastonbury Rink. All alumni interested in participating should contact John Dunham, 527-3151, ext. 285.