Letters

To the editor: It is encouraging to see peace as a subject of discussion at the Uni versity, as witne ssed by the article "How to Make a Lasting Peace in the Middle East" (Spring 1979)by Prof. Bueno University of Rochester Fall 1979 de Mesquita and Mr. Berkowitz. Are there any courses offered that have the word " peace" in the title? Why shouldn't peace be made a four-year (or more) degree program with a B.A. in peace , Articles followed by an M.A. in peace , and a Ph.D. in peace, just as degrees can now be pursued in Three Stars of Texas 2 engineering, mu sic , or law? To carry the Profiles of three alumni thought further, how about a presidential cabinet position called Secretary of Peace, with a substantial budget (perhaps not immediately A Man Who Met the Test 4 larger than that of the Defense Department)? Dr. Dudley Powell '50M Ingvar Eliasson '50 White Plains, N.Y.

One More Step for Mankind 7 To the editor: Ed Gibson '59 Tom Magee '65 and I are commanding officer and executi ve officer, respectively, of a Naval Reserve unit in Folsom, Pa. At a unit An Oil Executive Looks drill this spring, Tom told me he had read in at the Shortage 11 the Rochester Review that Lt. Cdr. Ro n Robert Moehl man '3 1 " Ziggy" Ziolkowski '64 had died . (Tom had known Ron through Navy ROTC ; they re­ ceived commissions at the same time.) Handicapped Students: Ron, his wife Marce, and I were all members Joining the Mainstream 15 of the Yellowjacket Marching Band. Ron took over as drum major when I arrived on campus Two UR education professors study a new in the fall of 1962,and he retained that position approach to educating the handicapped through 1964. I was impressed with his dy­ namic leadership. He worked hard to achieve excellent results and he was proud of his Profile of a Philosopher 18 association with the organization. His dedica­ A trib ute to Prof. Lewis Beck tion rubbed off on us musicians, and I hope we turned our high degree of motivation into 21 enjo yable shows. Mindy's Made It I'll never forget our band trip to Ohio for the Mindy Kaufman '78E joins the Rochester-Findlay College football game in New York Philharmonic 1962. We arrived on a Friday and I bought a newspaper. Splashed across the top of page one was a photo of the UR team with the caption: "Big-Time University of Rochester Departments Invades Findlay." I didn't know whether to choke or laugh! Letters 1 Alumnotes 29 Our team was anything but big-time, and even small college football in Ohio, home of Paul Travel Corner 1 In Memoriam 38 Brown , Woody Hayes, and the like, is and always has been top-notch. My apprehension Identity Crisis 22 Obituaries 39 increased when I read that a Findlay halfback was a U.S. record-holder in one of the sprint News Digest 24 Review Point 40 distances. The town of Findlay had planned a big parade down the main street on Saturday morning, and the Yellowjacket Band was in­ vited to participate and compete with local bands, including that of Findlay College, for a large trophy. It rained all morning and the parade was called off. By game time, the rain had stopped but the field was a quagmire. The Findlay band took one look at the mud and Rochester Review. Fall 1979; Editor: Ronald C. Roberts; Assistant Editor: Raymond A. Mart ino ; walked back to their band room. We never saw Cop y Editor : Vera M. Wight; Art Director: Stephen Reynold s; Staff Photographer:ChrisT. Quillen ; them again. Staff Writer: Gloria Peterson; Alumnotes Editor: Barbara Powers. Published qu arterly by the The Yellowjacket Band , however, had not University of Roche ster and mailed to all alumni. Editorial office, 107 Administration Building, come all that way for naught. Our adviser, Al Roche ster, N.Y. 14627. Second-class postage paid at Roche ster, N.Y. 14692. USPS 715-360 Tevels, drum major Ron, president Al Carlton, Travel Corner

and band officer George Singer decided we should go on , even though the mud was several inche s deep and the yard lines were all but obliterated. The band members enthusiasti­ cally endo rsed this decision. We did the best we could. Th e footing was terrible and we seemed to do more slipping and sliding than marching. We were caked with mud up to our knee s. To top things off, the two company fronts (large, horizontal groups), which were suppose d to end up on the goal line at the end of the show, wound up five ya rds apart because of the non existent yard line s. Wh at crowd there was gave us a polite cheer, more for our determination than for our preci sion . Back to the bleachers we went, but our lusty renditions of the Marching Son g and Football Song couldn' t spur our side to victory. A 12-12 tie early in the contest degenerated into a 31-14 rout , with the sprint champion halfback look­ ing pretty fast even in the slop. But Ron was Rochester alumni visited the exhorting us at the end. Wh y? The parade Leaning Tower ofPisa on a trip mar shal, out of courtesy to the visitors, had to Italy last spring. awarded us the trophy for the best band, and Ron wanted to make sure that no one told George Ward '65, special assistant to Tours Planned for 1980 any one how we got it when we returned to the the U.S. Ambassador to Italy, gave a Some dates and arrangements are still River Campus. special briefing at the U.S. Embassy in to be confirmed; prices are subject to We hit Todd Union about 1:00 a.m . Sunday. Rome for a group of Rochester alumni modest change. Disheveled in appearance after the lon g rid e touring Italy last spring. Ward provided home, Ron strode out of the bu s brandishin g Israel-February 10-18 th e tr oph y a lo f t b e f ore a n im a g­ historical highli ghts of U.S.-It aly rela­ Four days in Jerusalem and three days ined hord e of well-wishers, with a beaming Al tions and evalua tions of the political and in Tel Aviv (deluxe hotels). Transfers and Ca rlton right beh ind him . When 1 left the economic situa tion in Italy. baggage handling included. Niagara University four years later, the trophy still The group's Italian tour guide later Falls departure and return via TIA occupied a place of hon or in the band office in Todd. told John Braund, University staff escort charter. Optional tours in and out of In 1965, I was privileged to succeed "Ziggy" for the tour: "It's hard to believe what an major cities available. $699. as drum major. His future wife Marce was excellent grasp he (Ward) has of some Russia- Late June, Early July head of the baton twirlers. We had a goo d yea r, very complex situations and how clearly Thirteen da ys, including two in Mos­ but Ron's shoes were big one s to fill. I followed he was able to describe them. With so him into the Nav y after graduation, but never cow, three in Kiev, two in Odessa, and a reestabli shed contact with him. About two many parties seeking support and such six-day cruise on the Dnieper River years ago, I was sur prised to see a write-up in crazy inflation, even native Italians don't through the heart of the Ukraine, with the Review about him bein g stationed at the know what's going on here. " visits to Kherson, Zaporozhye, Kanev, ava l War Colle ge in Ne wport, R.I. Wh en 1 Ward has been in Italy since 1974, got up to Newpo rt last Au gust for my two­ Svetlovodsk , and Sokirno. Pan Am week active duty for training peri od , I sto pped followin g earlier duty in Munich. One of charter from New York City; all accom­ by the College to see if he was still aro und. I the highli ghts of his meeting with the modations, meals, and shore excursions was told he was stationed in San Die go with alumni group was a reunion with his included. $1,399. Anti-Submarin e Squ adron 41. I resolved to former German teacher, Prof. Arthur London-Late October write him and Marce but never did. Hanhardt. And there, in Rom e, Italy, After Tom Magee gave me the bad news, 1 Eight days, convenient location. In­ Ward enjoyed a conversation with Han­ wro te to the comma nding officer of Ron 's cludes breakfast dail y, baggage handling, squadron, asking about the cause of de ath. A hardt and his wife, Helene - a conversa­ and transfer s. A variety of low-cost op­ few weeks ago, I recei ved the repl y. Ron was tion in German. killed as a result of an aircraft accident during tional tours available. Rochester depar­ carrier qu alification operations aboard the ture and return via TIA charter. $6 19. U.S.S. America off the coas t of Virginia in For 1980 tours: Materials and infor­ October 1978. Last Call: mation for Israel will be available in early Tom and I want to convey our deep est fall ; for Ru ssia, by the end of this year; sympathies to his famil y, and as fellow naval Greece-October 14-22 officers make note of the fact that he was Accommodations at the Royal Olym­ for London, in early 1980. For informa­ described by his squa dron as "a fine officer and pic Hotel, two meal s dail y, Acropolis tour, tion and reservation forms for all alumni competent pilot." I myselfalso want him to be Athens museum tour, transfers, and bag­ tours, contact John Braund, Alumni Of­ rem embered as one of a long line of Yellow­ gage handling all included . Several op­ fice, Frederick Douglass 306, University jacket Band lead ers stretching back to the great Frederick Fennell in the 1930's. "Ziggy" was a tional tours ava ilable. TIA cha rter from of Rochester, Rochester, N .Y. 14627. good one- no doubt ab out it! and return to Rochester. $689. Phone: (7 16) 275-3682. H. E. " Kit" Cri ssey, Jr. '66 Folsom , Pa. - ...... , - I I I I

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2 I I I University of Rochester alumni ~ are scattered throughout the country and the world, and nearly 900 of them are \ in the Lone Star State. Review '\ editor Ron Roberts spent a few days in I Dallas and Houston last spring } talking with astronaut Ed Gibson, oil executive Robert Moehlman, and Dr. Dudley Powell. His report begins on the following page.

3 A Man Who Met the Test

It's a rainy night in Dallas, and for Dr. Now it is after 8:30. Dr. Powell is tired, Dudley Powell '50M the view from be­ but familiarity with the road helps. He hind the steering wheel isn't a good one. has lived in Dallas since 1958, the year The dark road tends to blend with the when he became the first black doctor shoulder, and headlights of other cars ever to de liver a baby in a major hospital reflect randomly from puddles and rain­ in that city. drops. The surface is slick. "This was nothing butjack rabbits and Tuesdays are long days for Dr. Powell, wheat," he says, waving a hand at the and this one has been especially so. At the endless variety of fast-food places and end of the hectic, no-lunch workday, Dr. shopping plazas which flank the road. Powell attended a special reception at St. "Jack rabbits and wheat." His voice be­ Paul Hospital, followed by the third trays any intention to hide fatigue. He has annual Alfred L. Vassallo Memorial Lec­ been up since 5:00 a.m. ture. The talk on "Current Concepts in A few miles slip by and the windshield the Treatment of Trophoblastic Disease" wipers pound. The conversation slowly was given by Dr. Charles B. Hammond of turns to Dr. Powell's days as a student at Duke University. the University of Rochester medical school. Suddenly, he seems revitalized. He brightens at the mention of the late Dr. George H. Whipple, the venerable dean and founding father of the school.

4 "He was a tremendous teacher and a "I could have left the Arm y right then," and clinical associate professor ofobstet­ tremendous humanitarian," Dr. Powell Dr. Powell says. (He has finally made it to rics-gynecology at Southwestern Univer­ says. "He was a well-loved man. Youjust his comfortable home and is enjo ying the sity Medical School. In the latter role, don 't find men like that very often." dinner his wife, Beryl, has kept warm for perhaps taking a page from Dr. Whipple's Dr. Powell pau ses, but only for a him. )"But I didn't. I figured l owed it to treatment ofstudents, Dr. Powell makes it moment. The seed of remembrance has the United States to stay in." a point to have all of the residents at St. been planted, and the anecdotes bloom Dr. Powell ended up spending more Paul Hospital and their wives ("or their quickl y. than two decades in the Arm y Reserve , roommates, however they want to desig­ "A bunch of students would get to­ and in June 1977 he received the nation's nate them") to his home for dinner each gether to help a classmate paint a hou se Legion of Merit Award : "To Colonel year. on a Saturday morning," Dr. Powell says. Dudley Powell, in recognition of22 years Dr. Pat Jenevien, chief of medical "Next thing you'd know, Dr. Whipple ofservice, culminating in the position of education at St. Paul Hospital, says, "Dr. would show up dre ssed in coveralls and Chief, Professional Services, of the 94th Powell has done a great deal for the black he'd say, 'Give me a glass of beer and a General Hospital." paintbrush.' It was while on active duty in the late "And his wife was always willin g to 1950's, however, that Dr. Powell set his 'I saw one woman who had baby-sit for the children of the married sights on Dallas and upon a career which eight kids at home and didn't students so that they could go to parties." would become a model ofhum anitarian­ Dr. Powell is smiling now. The rain is ism and community service. And it began want a ninth. She was poor still beatin g, but the trip seems easier. with a Texan's chance rem ark on segre­ and tried to get an abortion. "Or,you'd be bumming a ride along the gation in the state. And she died.' road and who would stop to pick you up? "There was a chap from Ode ssa who Old Whipple." was a major," Dr. Powell recall s, "and he Dr. Powell's resp ect isn' t re served told me that no black person could community and for all of Dallas. He's a solely for Dr. Whipple, however. He deliver a black bab y anywhere in the city highl y respected black physician , and think s highly ofthe entire medical staffof of Dallas because it was totally segre­ he's been very active in the city." his era. "They were all teachers," he says. gated. I thought he must be crazy. But it Dr. Jenevien and other colleagues rat­ "They were tou gh, and they knew their turned out it was true , and I got mad. I tle off long lists of Dr. Powell's civic stuff. The school went out of its way to said, 'I'm going to break this damn thing contributions, lists seemingly shortened find the best teachers. I always said if I up .' " only by the time they have to talk. Most flunked out of Rochester, I'd apply right The thought of his youthful boldness begin by mentioning Dr. Powell's in­ back to Roche ster." makes Dr. Powell chuckle. He shakes his volvement with Planned Parenthood, be­ head and sips his wine . cause he is on the national board of "You know, I didn't even consider the directors. He was instrumental in starting 'A chap from Odessa told me obstacles that were ahead of me. That the organi zation in Dallas and until that no black person could may have been dumb, or it may have recently served as its medical director and president. deliver a black baby anywhere been wrong. But I met those obstacles head-on, and a lot of people helped me. "I think the greatest handicap the in the city of Dallas.... 1 And we overcam e." world has to face is overpopulation," he thought he must be crazy.' Th e obstacle s, Dr. Powell says, not only says. "I think people should have the included bein g black in a city where all of opportunity to have all the kids that are the hospitals and schools and most of the wanted and that they can afford to have. Dr. Powell was born in Jamaica in the other facilities were segregated, but also I'm again st coercive birth control, and I West Indie s, where he becam e a licen sed speaking with a Jamaican accent. He was think everyone should be-as long as the pharmacist before coming to the United a foreigner, and certainly not familiar parents can afford the child and the States and Fisk Uni versity (Cleveland) in with the politics and lifestyles of the mother's life is not in jeopardy." 1944.After graduating from Rochester in American South. As for abortion, Dr. Powell is emphatic. 1950, he took a year's intern ship in Nevertheless, Dr. Powell began a pri­ "Only the lady who is pregnant can make Syracuse, then spent from 1951to 1955 in vate practice in obstetrics-gynecology in that decision. Not the doctor, not the Cleveland. In 1954-55 he was assistant 1958.That year he became the first black husband. Nobody. Only the lady can chief of obstetrics-gynecology at Metro­ member of the medical staff at Parkland make that decision. politan Hospital and instru ctor in obstet­ Hospit al and the first black doctor to "Abortion is not a means of birth rics-gynecology at Case Western Reserve deliver a baby at a major hospital in control," he says. "Never has been. But if University. Dallas. a lady gets pregnant, with all the methods In 1956, Dr. Powell was drafted by the In the past 21 yea rs, Dr. Powell has ofcontraception available today, and she Uni ted States Arm y. A few years later he added thre e associates to his practice ; still doesn't want to have the baby, then found out that the action had been together they opera te the Wom en's Clinic invalid because he had not been a U.S. of Dallas. He is also an attending physi­ citizen at the time. cian at three large metropolitan hospitals

5 that would be an unwanted child. And On that afternoon of November 22, the abuse and social trauma that an , .. . the strength of this 1963, Beryl Powell was to be in a special unwanted child must bear throughout its group of city leaders at a luncheon with life is really too much. country is in our young folks , the President. "I am for legalized abortion, abortion and education is a basic "I was sitting there thinking how lucky over and above board, so that these commodity that we have to I was to be included at such an important people who want one will not go 'under­ function," she says. "Our table was near ground' and get sick and die. I saw one sell. ' the front, and the President would be woman who had eight kids at home and only a few feet away. We waited. Finally, didn't want a ninth. She was poor and sons, Tyrone, "integrated that school," he there was a bit ofcommotion at the door, tried to get an abortion. And she died. says. "He was the first black to attend; and we thought he was coming. All of the See, the rich people don't have that now there are a number of them. You newspaper people rushed to the door. problem. They can go anywhere-Bos­ know, the strength ofthis country is in our There was more confusion and then a ton, California, anywhere-and have one young folks, and education is a basic buzz of conversation. Someone came done competently. No big deal about commodity that we have to sell. If we over and said: 'Something has happened. that. But the poor people suffer. They get don't do that, we are in trouble." I don't think the President will be coming. messed up trying to get a septic, under­ Beryl Powell shares his thoughts on I think he has been shot.' ground abortion. And you never saw education. "She's on another 'school "I burst out crying, and others did, too. anyone so sick in your life. Before abor­ binge,'" Dr. Powell says with a smile . Eventually, we walked out solemnly. I sat tions were legalized, I guarantee you "She's taking college subjects she thinks in my car for over an hour before I felt there were at least one or two abortions she likes-mathematics, Shakespeare, able to drive home." every night in every major hospital in this history, and probably next month some­ A moment of silence follows the story, city. It was really hea rt-rending." thing else. I don't know what she's going a tale that still evokes shock after 16 Dr. Powell serves on the boa rds of to do with all that education. She already years. The ringing of the telephone many Dallas organizations, including has degrees in pharmacy and social ser­ breaks the spell. It's Tyrone, calling from Goals for Dallas, Senior Citizens of vices." (He pauses for effect and to make Palo Alto, where he's a sophomore at Dallas, and St. Mark's School. He's also a sure that Beryl, who is in the kitchen, can Stanford. life member of the NAACp, and once hear him.) "I find it's cheaper for her to While Beryl chats on the phone, Dr. served as president of its Kennedy be in school than to be out walking the Powell confides that he's "trying to nudge branch.But Dr. Powell doesn't sympa­ stores every day. I encourage her." Tyrone into medicine . But Tyrone says, thize with all of the programs that the Beryl shares, too, a concern for and 'You people work too hard. I want to go NAAC P advocates, particularly those invo lvement in the Dallas community. into law.' He's still undecided, so I won't having to do with welfare. He strongly Her civic contributions were rewarded, push." believes in the work ethic. for example, with an invitation to Wash­ It's obvious that Dr. Powell won't be "You see," he says, slowly, "if I have to ington for President Johnson's inaugu­ disappointed either way. He has the same beg you at Christmas time for 10cents to ration. philosophy about the future of each ofhis buy a toy for my kid, then you have Because of their positions in the com­ sons, a philosophy that has served him deprived me of my dignity. And if I have munity, both of the Powells were more well. "As long as they can help themselves to go to a public place and stand in line close ly involved than most other Dallas and can do something for society, that's for a welfare check, and the clerk says, citizens in the chain of events surround­ all I ask." - 'What's your name?' and I say, 'Dr. ing the assassination of President Powell,' right there in front of a large Kennedy. audience, then I have reached a level of Dr. Powell was in his office when it human degradation. happened and, he remembers, "Every­ "For people who are old or for people thing stopped. Lord have mercy, every­ who are unable to work, welfare is jus­ thing stopped. No one could believe it. tified. But there are too many who just Later, I was on duty at Parkland when want to sit down and put their hand in the they brought Oswald in and when they gravy train. No civilization can prosper brought Ruby in." that way. People must work; they must know the value of work." People must know the value of educa­ tion , too, he says. That's why he has been active in the leadership of St. Mark's, perhaps the finest private boys' schoo l in the Southwest. The youngest of his three

6 Years from now, scientist-astronaut Ed The next step for the United States' could wake up, put bread in the toaster, Gibson '59 will be listed among the space program-a step in which Gibson plow the north forty, and be back before pioneers of the space age. In early 1974he will playa major role-is the advent of the the toast pops up. was a member of the Skylab 3 crew that Space Shuttle orbiter, a vehicle which The orbiter, named the Enterprise, spent 84 consecutive days in space, trav­ may become to the space program what a looks like a large airplane. It rides pig­ eling 34.5 million miles and orbiting the dependable tractor is to a farm. It will be gyback aboard a rocket to reach earth earth 1,214 times. in constant use, performing a variety of orbit, then, after carrying out its mission, But, like all pioneers, Gibson realizes duties, hauling different cargoes, and it returns to earth and lands on the that "getting there" is only half the job. generally helping to make economic ends ground like an airplane. Now comes the need for repetitive work, meet. "I think the entire nature of the space the daily toil and resultant benefits which Of course, there are some obvious program is going to change once the will make it all worthwhile. The trip in differences between the orbiter and a Shuttle becomes operational," Gibson the Conestoga was exciting, but now it's tractor. For one thing , the Space Shuttle says, "because the objective of the Shuttle time to build the cabin and plant the can cross the United States, East Coast to is to make it cheap and relatively easy to crops. West, in eight minutes. If the average John Deere could do that , Grandpa

7 gain frequent access to space. The ad­ vantages to the user are obvious. We're building a vehicle which can be reused many times, so there is a great cost savings. There's also a factor of timeli­ ness: it will be easier to get into space when you want to. Weexpect to have five of these vehicles in the flight hangar at one time, and each one can be used 100 times. "We hope to reach a flight frequency of once a week or once every two weeks by the mid-1980's," Gibson says. "From a pilot's standpoint, we will find that, rather than having one traumatic flight every five to 10 years as in the past, we will be flying several times in one year. We'll become more like airline pilots. And this kind of flight frequency will be healthy because it will show the maturity of the space program. It might not be noticed, of course, because people won't even hear about a launch. Theywill only hear about it if something goes wrong." Earlier this year, Gibson was in charge of the academic training program for 35 scientist-astronauts. During the summer, he directed a group of eight scientists in the development of software to control the Enterprise. The first Shuttle flight is scheduled for November. Gibson won't be aboard, but he'll be in the key position of capsule communicator, or "cap-com," as the NASA folks say.He will do the talking for Ground Control during the launch, and he has spent much time training for the task. "It's really a challenging job," Gibson says, "especially in the flight phases where time is critical. There is little time for discussion about what transmissions should be made or how to interpret what the astronauts in the orbiter are saying. You have to know what each person in Mission Control is responsible for, and you have to know what types of things each person may request. And you have to understand the vehicle technically as well as all the operations so that trans­ missions can be made in a timely and accurate manner. "During the liftoff, for example, if you send the wrong voice command-or a confusing command-for something that has to be done in 10seconds, you could be in trouble. Even though you may run into only one or two such situations in a flight, you have to be ready for the entire Previous page: An out-the-window view ofSpace Shuttle orbiter; above: the orbiter multitude of situations which you could Enterprise rides piggyback aboard a rocket to reach earth orbit. possibly encounter."

8 The responsibility is magnified by the fact that this will be the maiden flight of the vehicle, Gibson says. "We're not at all cognizant ofall the normal characteristics of the Enterprise, to say nothing of the failure modes. In trying to prepare for something like this you really have to cover the waterfront. We must be ready for anything." No specific operational objective or "payload" is scheduled for the first voyage of the Enterprise. "The name of the first flight is to get up there, do a brief evaluation of the vehicle, and get back," Gibson says. "It's not an ambitious schedule in terms ofwhat we do in orbit. But it's exceptionally ambitious in terms of gathering data on the aerodynamic characteristics ofthe vehicle. There's a lot of uncertainty involved-more uncer­ tainty that we'd like in some areas-and there are bound to be surprises. So we take a very conservative approach on the first mission." Ironically, Gibson had to deal with some uncertainty in his Skylab flight, and that was the last flight in the series. "Because we were the last flight in the Skylab series, there were a lot of things that people came up with at the last minute as 'good ideas to do,'" Gibson says. "Our flight became kind ofa dump­ ing ground for these 'good ideas ,' and we ended up trying to cope with a large number of experiments and procedures which we had not been able to prepare for. It made our flight difficult at the beginning." But Gibson had some "positive sur­ prises," too. "What surprised me most," he says, "was the ability of the human eye to see features on the ground and to make some scientific sense out of them. As poorly trained as I was in earth observation-I had spent most of my time before the flight in solar observation-I could see that this will be a fertile field for a Gibson in front ofa display in the mission simulation and trainingfacility at the Johnson geologist, an oceanographer, or a meteor­ Space Center ologist. I look forward to the day when we can set up a good earth observatory and put trained people up there to gather data on very specific features which might go unnoticed by an unmanned going camping; after a few days the depending upon how many people and satellite. An unmanned satellite can look sleeping bag and tent become old friends, how many consumables (ba sically ox­ only straight down and can take data only and it's just another way to live. Same is ygen , hydrogen, and food) are on board. at preselected times. The viewing angle true in zero-G. After a while you adjust. "If you take four or five people, you and the timing are most critical." It's not foreign, just different." have to take more consumables," Gibson Gibson also was pleasantly surprised The pair of astronauts aboard the first explains. "That adds weight and shortens at "how easy it was to adapt. We were Shuttle flight won't enjoy much adjust­ the duration. Two people can stay up 25 to there for 84 days," he says, "but I found ment time because it's only scheduled as a 28 days. We're trying to boost the 'stay­ that after two weeks I was comfortable in two-day flight. The vehicle itselfis able to time' and one plan is to develop a power the zero-gravity environment. It's like stay up for nearly 30 days, Gibson says, module which would be launched into

9 "There is no age limit for astronauts as flyers," he says. "Deke Slayton flew when he was over 50, and certainly I think I've got another good 10 years, and who knows how much longer. But it's a sub­ jective thing. I could walk into the flight surgeon's office one day and come out grounded. You never know." But if all goes as he hopes, Gibson sees a lengthy future with NASA. "I would like to stay with the space program for a very long time," he says, "whether it is in the flying category or in the management aspect. A lot will depend upon what our country decides to do in space: whether we come up with a really challenging space program which moves forward as we should; or whetherwe continue to live in the age of timidity, which I find us in When Gibson returned to the University in 1974 to receive an honorary doctor ofscience now, and not plan for the future. We'll just degree, he visited his fraternity, Theta Chi, where he talked with Nick Cheston (right), have to see how that goes." and Sheldon Touchfieid (center). He is a member ofUR's Trustees' Council, and, There are now 53 astronauts at the although his schedule is busy, he gets back to campus when he can. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center outside "I was in Rochester a little less than a year ago," he says, "and I'm continually amazed of Houston, where Gibson is located. at how the University has grown, not just in size, but in quality. I look at the engineering That includes 35 who are relatively new. college,for example, and see tremendous improvements in the curriculum and the modern approach to teaching. There's a great deal ofvitality there. People are not afraid of Gibson attributes the fairly large turn­ change, and that's good." over to a lull in the space program in the mid-to-Iate seventies. , "The turnover began after the com­ orbit on a separate mission. Then the their specialties come up in the opera­ pletion of the Apollo flights," he says. Shuttle could dock with the module and tional phase, they will be likely can­ "That's when we realized there was going receive power from it. Another possibil­ didates for a flight." to be a hiatus in the program from the ity wou ld be to take solar panels along to Gibson sees no difficulty with having early seventies until about 1980. We were supply power." women astronauts aboard a flight-un­ looking at six or seven years with no Each of the first four flights of the less the difficulty comes from the raised flights, and that was rather discouraging. Shuttle will have two astronauts aboard, eyebrows of people outside the NASA We saw a large exodus of people at that and the tentative plans call for four environment. time." people aboard the fifth and sixth flights. "Internally, there is no problem," he At this point, however, Gibson's short­ range future is set. First come the test The first six flights will take about two says. "In working together day to day, I flights for the Shuttle, then into the years. "Then we get into the operational find the women in the program think and phase," says Gibson, "and we begin tak­ function in their own disciplines the same operational phase, then, perhaps, an­ other flight for him. This period will give ing 'payload' specialists for some sophis­ as the men. 0 one should be surprised ticated experiments." by that. We just forget about any dif­ him a chance to assess the program and Although the Shuttle is primarily de­ ferences when working, and I'm sure the its future and his own place in it. But it signed for earth orbit, additional booster same would be true in flight. Problems, if won't be a matter ofquiet contemplation systems may be inserted in the payload they occur, will stem from what the and idle observation on his part. bay to reach an orbit farther from earth. 'external world' makes of it." "Not at all," he says. "I'll be doing all I "Or we may even launch some un­ Also waiting for a flight on the Shuttle can to try to make the program move in manned interplanetary vehicles from the is one Edward G. Gibson. "I'm in the the right direction." - payload bay of the orbiter," Gibson says. astronaut office, and that means I'm Among those waiting to fly aboard the standing in line for a flight like everybody Shuttle are six women astronauts. "None else," he says. "It won't be one of the first of them will be on the first six flights," four or six, most likely, but after that I Gibson explains, "because those mis­ think I stand a good chance to get on sions are designed for people with test­ board." pilot backgrounds. The women in the Gibson is 42 and in excellent physical program are mission specialists with ex­ condition. He still runs between 20 and 30 pertise in various engineering and scien­ miles a week; sometimes he does 40. tific areas. When the requirements for

10 Report from Houston: An Oil Executive Looks at the Shortage

'Oil executives are shady characters, aren't they? I mean, they charge us an arm and a leg for gasoline and make us wait in line to buy it. (And we all know there's plenty of it hidden somewhere.) These guys all wear black hats, hate kids, and wouldn't think twice about booting a puppy dog.'

II t wouldn't be stretching matters too far I to think the general public, with an able assist from the media, has formed the preceding opinion of today's oil ex­ c Foreign-Produced Oi ecutives. For anyone whose cynicism has o reached this level, perhaps a visit with Robert Moehlman wou ld be in order. a 50 Moehlman was a member of the first E University ofRochester class to graduate ~ from the River Campus in 1931. After en earning his master's and a doctorate in c geology at Harvard, he spent the next o 40 decade and a halfin the mining industry. o For the past 28 years he's been an oil 1-­ man, first as executive vice president of o Austral Oil Company, and since 1962 en with Newmont Oil Company, Houston 30 (originally as president and since 1978 as :::i vice chairman). -«S But Moehlman doesn 't wear a black (5 hat , and he isn't the least bit nasty to kids, t: dogs, or even reporters who ask him 20 abo ut the oil situation. In fact, he relishes '0 the chance to talk , in his calm , articulate CI) fashion, about the problems of his in­ C) «S dustry. He's concerned about the oil .... shortage and about the nation's depen­ C 10 (1) dence upon foreign oil. He's concerned, too, about the need to develop alternative ~ sources of energy in the future. (1) Moehlman doesn't say there's a simple c. solution to such a complex problem as the oil dilemma. But he does say there are 1959 1971 some definite steps which would help , and one of the top priori ties, he believes, is to lessen dependence upon foreign oil. In 1959, only 18.3 percent of the oil used in the United States was imported, rising As one might expect, Moehlman and to 26 percent in 1971.Today, it's about 45 .. . one of the top priorities, he other u.s. oil executives favor deregula­ percent. tion of prices on domestic oil , and "Since 1973," Moehlman says, "the believes, is to lessen Moehlman reasons that deregulation is price of domestic oil has been regulated dependence upon foreign oil. in everybody's best interest. by the government, but the price of "Assume we pay American oil produc­ imported oil has not been regulated. We ers as much as we pay foreign oil produc­ are paying for foreign oil whatever the " Looking at it as a taxpay er, 1have to be ers," he says. "Certainly there will be sellers decide to charge. In recent years, upset about the situa tion, because it's a more domestic oil produced at a price of that's been between $12 and $14 a barrel, major factor causing inflation in this $15 than at $9 per barrel, with a dramatic and now (April 1979) it's $15 and, on a country," Moehlman says. "The price of increase in u.s. tax payments. If we spot basis, as much as $20 a barrel. oil goes up , we keep importing more and spend $15 for a barrel ofoil from abroad, "Over the same period oftime, because more of it, money goes out, we cannot very little ofthe money spent come s back of regulations, domestic producers were assess taxes on foreign oil to provide a to the U.S. Treasury. But a substantial paid as little as $5.50 per barrel, with an balance, and so the printing presses at the amount of the same $15 paid for a barrel average of about $9. In effect, we have U.S. Treasury make up the difference. of domestic oil would wind up in the been subsidizing the importation of Inflation is the result. Inflation occurs Treasury. foreign crude. when tax revenues don't match govern­ "We hear about the obscene profits , or ment expenditures." unjustified profits , in the domestic oil industry," he says. "But whatever profit there is, the very efficient Internal Reve­ nue Service gets at least half of it at the tail end. And when the shareholders

12 Moehlman adds that increased profits and selling process, Moe hlman says, the will increase the efforts ofoil producers to country can look forward to a grad ual find more of the precious commodity. controlled shift to other forms of energy. Used in U.S. "That's one of the keys in deregulation," It's a matter of"buying time" to allow the he says. "We wou ld be using price as a shift to occur at a sensible pace, rat her means to channel efforts. First we might than on a crash basis. look offshore, for example. Then, if we "Heating fuel is one example," Moehl­ find that we can get oil somewhere else man explains. "You can generate heat and deve lop it and produce it at a lower by burning oil, natural gas, coal, or cost, we can move there . Price will push compacted wood, or through nuclear or management to do its job more effi­ solar power. If the price for oil and ciently. natural gas increases, then coal becomes "The man on the street understands more competitive, and more of it will be more than the politicians give him credit mined, and so it goes. And higher rela tive for," Moehlman says. "He figures: 'By prices for oil and gas should help to gosh, if I'm going to pay higher prices for decrease consumption of oil and gas. Of gasoline, I sure hope I'm going to have course, I think solar power is one of the more of it.' We rea lly don't know exactly ultimate answers to our energy nee ds. where to find oil. But with deregulation But we need to move gradually while the we can afford to look." alternative energy forms are being However, Moehlman warns, the in­ developed." dus try's efforts to find more oil might be According to Moehlman, the theory of stifled if a much-discussed "windfall moving slowly, yet steadily, towa rd de­ profits" tax is slapped on at the wellhead. pendence upon alternative forms of en­ "Everyone, including President Carter, ergy also means some controls or plan­ now agrees that we have a shortage and a ning ofproduction rates from our proved pro blem, and that we've got to cut down reserves of oil. on foreign imports," Moehlman says. "We need to establish fair pricing policies to allow us to produce oil at a steady rate or gradually declining rate 'If we make a profit and then over a period of time-say over 20 this profit is taxed, that's years-during which time we will make 1979 the conversion of a major portion of justifiable, and the incentive to demand from oil and gas to other sources look for and produce more oil of energy," he says. .. . has not been removed.' "Cecil Andrus, the Secretary of the Interior, says we should produce oil as receive their dividends, that is regarded fast as we can," Moehlman adds. "Just as taxable income, and the IRS takes "But we still differ as to how a profits tax is yank it out of the ground and sell it, with another bite. We have to remember, too, to be imposed. There has been a lot of nothing in reserve. We wou ldn't even that employees working for oil compa­ talk about putting a tax at the wellhead, have the ability to tap a reserve sup ply to nies pay individual income taxes on their that is, a tax on every barrel as soon as it help us through a particularly cold winter. salaries, and that the domestic oil in­ comes out of the ground, in effect an I don't think that is a good policy for the dustry creates jobs for employees of excise or crude oil equalization tax. This public, and I think we would be in real affiliated industries. wou ld be the very worst kind of tax, trouble within five years. "Finally, part of the profit has to go because it would take away the incentive "The best reserve we can have for back into the investment ofcapital items. to produce. It precludes producing higher emergencies is in wells which are not So I see no reason why 'profit' should be cost oil. It wou ld limit the ability to search producing at full capacity. If we have considered a dirty word. Management for more oil and to do the necessary excess capacity at the wellheads, we can should try to operate efficiently, and the 'housekeeping' on the wells. best meet emergency needs as we did in result of a well-managed company is a "On the other hand," he says, "not World War II. profit. We have some horrible examples many people in the industry are com­ "Following the War, domestic wells of what happens when a company does plaining about a tax at the tail end. If we maintained or increased excess capacity not make a profit. The Penn-Central make a profit and then this profit is taxed, to peak at 2.8 million barrels per day (29.3 Railroad operated at a loss until it ended that'sjustifiable, and the incentive to look percent ofsupply) in 1957.Spare capacity up a receiver of government monies for and produce more oil, including high fell gradually and was wiped out by instead of a tax contributor. But was the cost oil, has not been removed." 1973." • Penn-Central a patriotically run com­ With deregulated prices and a profits pany because it didn't make money? tax applied at the end of the production Most American taxpayers wou ld rather see a company make a profit and pay taxes."

13 Building a Career From the Ground Up

Robert Moehlman was born in Roch­ Moehlman tried to get a position with "Burden & Co. was a pretty good ester, attended West High School, then the U.S. Geological Survey, but those show," Moehlman says. "They were in went tothe University ofRochester, where were depression years and the U.S.G.S. many things, including investments in at least two unusual things happened: wasn't hiring. However, he wasable to get orange groves which produced Minute - he became the first Rochester student a scholarship to Harvard, where he Maid orangejuice. When they decided to ever to receive Phi Beta Kappa honors as earned a master's in geology and a doc­ become involved in oil and gas, I was ajunior; torate in mining geology. designated to help. -and somehow he was elected senior "In the spring of 1935, I came into the "I had a friend in Wichita named Bob class president over Joseph C. Wilson. world with a fresh Ph.D., some experi­ Walters ('34), who also had gone to the "Joe and I attended West High to­ ence, and no job," he says. "While at University of Rochester, and we thought gether, then we went to the University," Harvard, I had worked summers for that Kansas would be a good place to start Moehlman recalls. "Even back then Joe mining firms in Mexico and Colorado, so drilling for oil. For one thing, it was fairly was recognized as an excellent leader and my wife (he had married Lillian Johnson easy to predict what the costs would be. businessman. He and I were bo th elected in Boston his last year at Harvard) and I And the success ratio was good in that officers; bu t I think the Class of'3 1got its headed out to the little town of Ouray in area: about one successful well for every wires crossed, because I ended up as the San Juan Mountains of Colorado." five drilled. president and he was treasurer." (Wi lson, For the next several months, Moehlman "Bob was the geologist for a drilling of course, later became head of Xerox worked in various temporary jobs in contractor, so our company made an Corp., chairman of the University's Colorado, often with the U.S.G.S. Fi­ agreement to back the contractor for Board of Trustees, and one of the Uni­ nally, he headed back East with his wife drilling 10 wells, and a special arrange­ versity's major benefactors.) to write resumes to mining companies ment was drawn up. Well,we drilled eight It was at the University where Moe hl­ while enjoying "free room and board straight dry holes. But the secretary in our man realized a first spark of interest in from our parents." New York office had great confidence. geology, a spark that was to be fanned and In the spring of 1936, Moehlman be­ She said: 'You said one in five wells nurtured for four years, eventually lead­ gan work as a geologist for the Ana­ would be productive, so the next two both ing to a career in mining and oil. conda Copper Mining Company in should be good.' And she was right. One "I started out as a major in mathemat­ Butte, Montana, for, he says, "the memo­ was fair, and the other was good, and in a ics and German," Moehlman says. "But rable figure of$157.50 per month. Itwas a matter of five years we had our money I took a freshman course in geology from great training ground, but it became back and were making a profit." Dr. (J. Edward) Hoffmeister, who was a repetitious after a couple of years." In the fall of 1950, Burden & Co . went very inspiring teacher. Then an assistant In 1938, Moehlman moved from into oil in a larger way, and in January professor of geology, Dr. Jim Gill, who Montana to Inspiration, Arizona, where 1951, Moehlman moved to Houston as was a Canadian, asked me if I wanted to he and Anaconda's chief geologist, Vin­ vice president of newly formed Austral work summers in the bush country of cent Perry, examined mining prospects Oil Company to conduct exploratory Quebec. He knew I didn't know a great for the company in the Southwest. In activities. Starting with zero production, deal about geology after just one fresh­ 1941,he recommended a copper prospect the company began drilling 20 or more man course, but it turned out that the near Reno, Nevada, which later became wells per year, and by 1962 had built up work didn't take many brains. It was Anaconda's Yerington mine, producing over $10 million in oil and gas sales per mostly cutting through the bush, putting over 100 million tons ofcopper ore. year. in picket stakes, and so on . From 1946 to 1950, Moehlman worked In 1962, Moehlman moved on to be­ "I continued to take geology courses at as a field geologist, then as chief geolo­ come president of Newmont Oil Com­ the University and to work summers for gist, for South American Mines Com­ pany, a wholly-owned subsidiary of prospectingcom panies in Canada.By the pany of New York City. About one-third Newmont Mining Company. Newmont's time 1 was a senior, in spite of the black ofhis time was spent in foreign countries. oil and gas sales in 1962 totaled $5.6 flies in Canada, I kind ofliked the work. In the late 1940's, the principal owners million. In 1978, gross revenues for New­ So I decided to make geology a career." of South American Mines formed a mont hit the $33 million mark. partnership called Burden & Co., which engaged in a variety ofrisk ventures. And it was in 1949 that Moehlman recom­ mended some exploratory oil drilling which made him a prophet and the partnership a profit.

14 Handil!appQd ~udQnfg: oin-n e aing am

By Ray Martino andicapped children who are edu­ H cated in special schools may find it difficult to face the problems ofthe "real" world. Once graduated from such a pro­ tective environment, they may not be prepared for a variety of unfamiliar situations. "Total isolation of handicapped stu­ dents in special programs deprives them ofvaluable lessons in living," says Harold Munson, who, with fellow University of Rochester education professor John Miller, has recently completed a study of handicapped education. Supported by a $478,000 grant from the Bureau of Education for the Handi­ capped of the U.S. Office 'of Education, Munson and Miller's three-year study examined the "mainstreaming" of high school deaf students in occupational ed­ ucation. Mainstreaming, the process of placing handicapped children in the reg­ ular classroom, has been required by federal law since 1975 "insofar as possi­ ble." Although the law has been imple­ mented in stages with complete compli­ ance set for this fall, mainstreaming efforts have lagged in many school dis­ tricts, according to Munson and Miller. The Education for All Handicapped Children Act requires that schools pro­ vide the handicapped with instruction in the "least restrictive environment." Al­ though the wording ofthe law is vague in some parts, the intent is clear: handi­ capped children are not to be denied their right to any educational program that they can benefit from. The law requires Munson that every school district establish a com­ mittee for handicapped education, that it assure due process for children and Monroe, Nassau, Westchester, and Mad­ Munson says. "Some parents feared for parents, and that it provide each handi­ ison-Oneida. One hundred seventy-five their children in the less protected envi­ capped child with an individualized pro­ deaf students attended academic classes ronment of the hearing. Some students gram of instruction. The child's progress with other deaf students at special shared this fear but were anxious to have must be evaluated annually and the schools and participated in vocational the opportunity. Parents wanted their program revised if necessary. All of these training classes with hearing students at children to be trained for a job-self-suf­ procedures are to take place "in the BOCES centers. ficiency was the overriding issue." company of normal peers." "We found that while the students and "Contrary to the 'back-to-basics' Munson and Miller observed four co­ teachers had some difficulty communi­ movement that we hear so much about, operative programs between schools for cating at first, they soon learned how to both educators and parents were more the deaf and local occupational training understand each other," Munson says. concerned about the socialization of the programs at units of New York State's "The deaf students and their parents deaf students," Miller says. "They want Board of Cooperative Education Ser­ generally expressed satisfaction with the the students to be prepared for normal vices (BOCES). The programs were lo­ program and felt that it would help in adult roles and to assume responsible cated in four counties of New York State: finding employment, which was a major attitudes toward work." concern. Proponents of mainstreaming in occu­ "At the beginning of the study, some pational education ofthe deaf argue that parents and students were apprehensive exposure to the greater variety of job about entering the training program," training programs offered for the hearing eventually will help the deaf to find jobs outside the traditional fields of drafting, key punching, and printing, Miller says.

16 Speci~ schoo~ have a rendency ~ uncomfortable with them-the non­ overcompensate for students' disabili­ handicapped often try too hard to be ties, and as a result they hinder the growth considerate. But the handicapped have to process, Munson says. "When deaf stu­ be understanding, too. The burden dents are put into a hearing classroom, doesn't lie entirely with the non­ they have to learn to communicate," he handicapped. says. "Through this sometimes painful "Teachers in regular classrooms tend to process, social and intellectual growth feel burdened with handicapped chil­ results." dren," Miller says. "They aren't used to "Special education teachers who making special accommodations for dis­ shelter their students have humanitarian abilities. They also don't want to neglect but misguided motives," Miller says. the rest of the class. Although special "Handicapped students may be teased training programs are being developed and ridiculed, and it's only natural for our for teachers who have mainstreamed hearts to go out to them. But they have to students, teachers are generally unpre­ learn to cope with these kinds of prob­ pared and apprehensive." lems. We're not doing them a favor by "Mainstreaming is not an easy process sheltering them from the teasing. The to implement," Munson says. "Teachers abrasive experiences will come anyway." need a great deal of help, especially in Munson says that many stereotypes of evaluating each student's capabilities. the handicapped make the acceptance of Developing individualized educational mainstreaming difficult. "People haven't plans takes a great deal of time and effort. Miller stopped patting handicapped children on Mainstreaming isn't just dumping kids the head," he says. "The fact is that the into a regular classroom. Well-planned range of abilities among the handicapped placements are crucial to the success of "As more potential employers contact is as broad as the general population. the students." more versatile deaf applicants who are Each handicapped person has his or her Aside from the numerous benefits to better prepared to work in the hearing own unique talents and strengths." handicapped children through main­ world, the employers may begin to iden­ "There is a patronizing sense of sym­ streaming, Munson and Miller feel that tify the handicapped more by their indi­ pathy for the handicapped," Miller says, the process is good for non-handicapped vidual capacities and skills than by the "that is expressed in the view that the children as well. "When teachers adapt to characteristics of their handicaps," he handicapped ought not to experience handicapped children, they begin using says. failure. According to this view, we're just techniques that make it easier for the rest While their study was limited to deaf setting them up for defeat when we of the children to learn," Miller says. "For students, Munson and Miller say that the challenge them: We don't treat the hand­ example, increased use of visual aids for findings are applicable to all types of icapped the same way as other children the deaf and a slower teaching pace handicapped education. "Our study in this respect. The normal growth of helped the progress of the hearing stu­ points out the kinds of problems that all human beings involves trying, failing, dents in our study." handicapped students face," Miller says. and then succeeding. We all need to "Through mainstreaming," Munson "The law requires individualized atten­ experience failures in order to lead to says, "normal children learn that those tion, so the uniqueness of each student's successes. We have to structure educa­ with handicaps are human beings, too. handicap must be taken into account." tional systems in such a way that the Normal kids have to learn to live with the "One problem that handicapped chil­ failures children experience have posi­ handicapped. Through personal contact, dren seem to share is a lower self-concept tive effects. By providing incentives that they learn to be comfortable with those than most non-handicapped children," motivate the children to succeed, coupled somewhat different from themselves. Munson says, "simply because they've with teachers who know how to handle Normal children also learn to be consid­ been told that they can'tdo certain things. the special problems of the handicapped, erate, an important lesson in living." In our study we've reversed this by there's some hope that we can continually Much opposition to mainstreaming asking: 'What can they do?' The pro­ increase the level ofsuccess." comes from those who ask: "Can we grams were designed to stretch students The development of appropriate aca­ afford to have this system of education?" to the limits of their abilities. We want to demic programs for the handicapped is "There's no doubt that individualized move them from a negative self-concept not the only facet of successful main­ education will cost more money," Miller to a positive one." streaming, Miller says. "It's very difficult says, "but the question we really should "Stretching is an essential principle in for both handicapped and non-handi­ ask is: 'Can we afford not to?' " • developmental theory," Miller says. capped people to learn to deal with each "People don't develop unless they are other," he says. "The handicapped don't provided with the opportunity and chal­ want to be treated as helpless cases. They lenge to make progress. A key to success­ realize that non-handicapped people feel ful mainstreaming is placing handi­ capped children at a level which they can handle, and at the same time encouraging them to make progress at a realistic pace."

17 .~ ~~ Lewis W. Beck: Profile ofa Philosopher By George Ford Joseph H. Gilmore Professor ofEnglish 18 o those readers who have had the Thomas Carlyle. Happily, when I met to affirm that the South was the best part T good fortune to know Lewis Beck as a Lewis Beck that day, Kant was never of the United States to have come from, person, the following summarized record mentioned. Indeed Lewis rarely men­ and Lewis Beck illustrates De Vane's of his career will seem curiously incom­ tions Kant among friends outside his point nicely. It should be added, however, plete. The record itself is perfectly accu­ department. Instead he talked of every­ that in doing so, Lewis has never ob­ rate and provides us with the facts of a thing else. He seemed to me to know scured his place oforigin by betraying the dazzling professional career, a record more about literature, especially eigh­ slightest shade ofa northern accent. This studded with a succession of tributes to teenth-century literature, than I and my characteristic was amusingly demon­ his eminence on both the national and English department colleagues did, and strated some years ago when he was international scene, culminating recently he was keenly interested in such sciences invited to act in a Rochester production in his being awarded an honorary degree as astronomy, and also in history. The of Shakespeare's Henry IV. His role was from the University of Tubingen. It is a history he liked was of the traditional that of Scroop, one of the leaders of a career that has brought honor not only to kind; he once remarked, characteristi­ rebellion. Speaking of King Henry and the star performer himself, but to the cally, that he wished historians would the rebellion, Scroop observes: university where he has taught for 30 resume writing about battles (with dates), "For he hath heard of our years. Good works glorify the institution or, more specially, about the lives ofkings confederacy, as well as the man, and Lewis Beck's good and queens and presidents, instead of And 'tis but wisdom works as a writer, public lecturer, and whatever it is that historians write about to make strong against him." leader in scholarly societies have been of today. Overall, on this my first encounter Actor Beck foresaw that if these lines are a kind that has helped immeasurably in with him, and later, I saw the truth of the spoken with a northern accent there are making Rochester better known in im­ saying that philosophy is the queen of no problems, but that the word confeder­ portant constituencies. One can recon­ sciences. acy, spoken as Stonewall Jackson might struct such achievements from the rec­ To complement what was said about have said it, would prompt an American ord, but what the record cannot bring his tastes in history, a word should be audience to howl with laughter. The out is that the man who executed all these added about his tastes in travel (and he is director, Lisa Rauschenbush, pooh­ good works is, as his students will testify, a remarkably well-traveled man). His poohed his warning. But he was right; not at all awesome to meet, and, as his preferences in transportation resemble he did stop the show. friends will testify, a delightful and re­ his preferences in history. What excites So far as I know, this occasion was laxed companion on all occasions. To him passionately are railway trains, Lewis Beck's only formal entry on stage­ share lunch with him in the Faculty Club especially if they are propelled by steam boards, but one likes to think ofits having or elsewhere is a treat for anyone who engines. For many years he has pursued had lasting effects on his thoughts. For enjoys discussions of an extraordinary researches into the whereabouts of live some 15 years later, when invited to give variety of topics , discussions featuring a surviving steam engines, and he has the distinguished Cassirer lectures at mixture of light and friendly banter with followed up his discoveries by taking Yale, he chose as his topic "The Actor and serious talk. train journeys in Turkey, in northern the Spectator." These lectures appeared Lewis Beck's overall affability, as well Canada, and in valleys of the Austrian in book form in 1975, a book so highly as his encyclopaedic knowledge, were of Tyrol. Very different is his attitude toward regarded that it has already been trans­ special use to the University in the 1950's, travel by air. The airplane he has come to lated into German. when he was serving as dean of the accept as a necessary evil ofthe twentieth Finally, the official record states that Graduate School (he is one of those rare century, although he postponed accept­ Lewis Beck has now "retired." This is also species of academic who has excelled as ing it for a good many years (I was with misleading. Admittedly it is true to say scholar, teacher, and administrator-a tri­ him on his first plane flight, which was that Lewis Beck is no longer meeting ple-threat person). The University, at that about 1962). This aspect of Lewis Beck classes, but in no other visible way has he time , was committed to making the al­ was highlighted by a friend who sug­ settled for what Shakespeare's Jacques ready fine College of Arts and Science gested that an artist should be engaged to called the "slippered ease." Six days a into something even finer, and Lewis prepare a symbolic sketch of him sitting week he arrives on campus early, reads as Beck was sent on tours of other institu­ in a horse-drawn cart (called a "dog­ he has always read, plans books, lunches tions seeking out persons to lure to cart"), wearing his tweedy Sherlock and talks with friends, and is probably Rochester. It was under such circum­ Holmes hat, holding his pipe, and show­ studying timetables for a trip on the stances that I myself first met him, and I ing him talking to his dog, seated oppo­ Trans-Siberian railway so that he can took to him immediately. Before meeting site (a bloodhound or a Dalmatian). On have a holiday. Holiday? Yes. Retire­ him I had been worried by his formidable the tailgate of the cart is a sign saying: ment? No . • reputation as a world expert on the "To the Past." philosophy of Kant, and I have to admit Another feature that impressed me on that I feared his unloading on me the kind the day I first met him, and since as well, of Kantian talk with which S. T Cole­ was his voice. Although the official record ridge , in his later years, is reported to states that he was born in Georgia, it have overwhelmed visitors such as neglects to note that he still talks as if he had been not only born in Georgia but lived all his life there. Dean W.C. De Vane ofYale, himself from the Carolinas, used

19 editors of several other publications and has written numerous articles for profes­ A Notable Career sional journals. In April of this year, about 30 of the world's leading philosophers gathered at Lewis W. Beck, Gideon Webster Bur­ lectual and Moral Philosophy, he also the University to pay tribute to their bank Professor Emeritus of Intellectual was presented with the University's first colleague at the Lewis White Beck Kant and Moral Philosophy, joined the Uni­ Edward Peck Curtis Award for Excel­ Conference. The Kant Conference is an versity of Rochester in 1949 as professor lence in Undergraduate Teaching. Beck annual event rarely held outside of of philosophy and chairman of a two­ was cited as "a scholar who loves to teach Germany. person department. He served as chair­ and who teaches superbly, one whose Beck has served as chairman of the man until 1966, and the department grew scholarship enriches his teaching and board of the American Philosophical in size and scope under his leadership. whose teaching enriches his students and Association and as president of the Asso­ Today there are 10 faculty members in his colleagues." ciation's Eastern Division, and was the the philosophy department, and national Beck is well known as one of the first president ofthe Northeast American surveys have recognized the Rochester world's leading scholars of the works of Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies. program as among the best in the quality the eighteenth-century German philoso­ He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellow­ of graduate faculty and in the effective­ pher Immanuel Kant. He is responsible ship in 1957 and has been a member of ness of the graduate program. for a number of translations of Kant's the council of the National Endowment While his department was gaining na­ works that are now considered standards for the Humanities. tional stature, Beck also served the Uni­ in the field. His Commentary on Kant's A graduate of Emory University, Beck versity as associate dean of the then "Critique of Practical Reason" is widely holds master's and Ph.D. degrees from Graduate School from 1952 to 1956 and recognized as the definitive commentary Duke University. He has received honor­ as dean in 1956-57, when a reorganiza­ on Kant's central work in ethics. ary degrees from the University of tion created the present integrated sys­ In addition, Beck has written six other Tubingen, Germany, and from Emory tem for graduate studies. books: Philosophic Inquiry, Six Secular University and College. Throughout his career at Rochester, Philosophers, Studies in the Philosophy of Before joining the Rochester faculty, Beck has been actively involved in teach­ Kant, Early German Philosophy, Essays Beck taught at Emory University, the ing undergraduates. In 1962, the year he on Kant and Hume, and Actor and Spec­ University of Delaware, and Lehigh was named Burbank Professor of Intel- tator. He has served on the board of University.

Good news! A new University ofRochester A lumni Directory will be published in the spring. We need infor­ mation from you to make it complete. The 1980 A lumni Directory will be an excellent way for you to track down old classmates. And the Alumni Office will use it to help plan reunions and events around the country. Return your completed questionnaire today. Be sure to watch for your Alumni Annual Giving mail to learn how to obtain your copy of the 1980 A lumni Directory.

20 Mindy's Made It

Mindy Kaufman, 22, joined Zubin Mehta's ew York Philharmonic last Spring as the only piccolo player and youngest musician in the 106-member orchestra. She began studying flute at 11 back in White Plains , N.Y, then at 14also took up the smaller, higher-pitched pic­ colo ("the fingering is just the same") so she could be in the Eastview Junior High School marching band for a Memorial Day parade. After graduating last year from the University of Rochester's Eastman School of Music, she beat out applicants from all over the U.S. to become the Rochester Philharmonic's only piccolo player. Less than a year later she con­ quered a field of 60-in four tryouts-and was on her way to Manhattan. The brown-haired, pixiei sh Mindy practices two and a half hours and runs fivemiles every day "because it's good for my wind." Listing her weaknesses as bubble baths, cognac, Saturday Night Live, and Sunday morning bagels, she has a ready answer when pressed about further ambitions. "I' m here to stay," she says. Feeling that at last she has found a musical home , she says, "J love music for orche stras and I don 't anticipate soloing. It feels wonderful to never ever have to audition again. " - Reprinted[rom the May 7, 1979, issue o[ People Weekly magazine by special permission; B 19 79. Time. In c.

Mindy Kaufman '78£ in downtown Rochester before leaving tojoin the New York Philharmonic

21 Identity Crisis

Wewere flooded with responses to the nursing photo we used in the last Review. Unfortunately, not everyone agreed on the year it was taken or the names of the individuals in the picture. Here are re­ plies from the few who did agree.

To the editor: The "Identity Crisis" photo is not at a Helen Wood Hall seance, but rather the annual Christmas carol songfest held in the main lobby of the old Strong. The three center "ladies with the lamps" are my classmates, distinguished by the black bands on their caps. From the left: Ann Kneller, Anne Van Rens­ selaer, and Susan Stalker. Their seeming se­ renity is an illusion. By that time, December 1961, we were rather fatigued, as we were in the last nursing class that required five years of training. Times have changed, nursing alums. Helen Wood Hall is now a coed University dorm, and the site of the popular retreat, the Bungalow, is now occupied by McDonald's golden arches. Elizabeth Kellogg Speegle '61, '62N, '73GN Webster, N.Y.

To the editor: To the editor: feel that we keep in touch through your pages. I recognized several of my diploma '62 and Several faces look very familiar, although I Roger Moore '50 degree '61 classmates in the "Identity Crisis" don't remember when the picture was taken. Tonawanda, N.Y. photo. It was taken during the traditional Had to either be the capping ceremony in singing of Christmas carols by student nurses Octo ber 1968or Christmas caroling 1968,since To the editor: at Strong Memorial Hospital. I see black bands on our caps. Got it right away-the ski group on page 27, I would guess that it was Christmas 1961, Third from left look s like Elaine Pipe Crist; Summer issue. when the students identified were seniors, fourth, Betsy Moorehouse Rhodes or maybe The group was the Outing Club, newly since they all have velvet bands on their caps. Candy Cae; sixth, Suzanne Clouser; then organized or reconstituted after World War II. From left: (second) Cindy Smith, (fourth) Ann Ruth Gustin and Debby Levin. Photo was taken between seme sters the winter Kneller, Anne Van Rens selaer, Sue Stalker, If I pick up the next Rochester Review and of 1946-47 during a four-day trip to Old Forge, and Jeanette Merritt. find out it was some class other than ours, well N.Y. Carole Shaner Ryan '62N ... then I shall just mutter to myself. I'm certain there were more people on the Phoenixville, Pa. Judy Goldthorp '69N trip , but the picture was posed outside the Old Lockport, N.Y. Forge Inn during prime drinking time after To the editor: (You don't have to muller to y ourself You can skiing. The photo of nursing students was taken join Theresa Costanzo Bucci '52N, Joan Klein Many faces are familiar, but 1 can't put a during the annual Christmas carol party in the Weidman '55, Joan Rupar MacLean '57N, and name to any for certain. The girl in a light lobby ofStrong Memorial Hospital. I believe it others. Thanks for trying, though.-Ed.) parka, front row center, holding skis may be was taken in December 1961. I think the Kay Sanney. The back row left (man's face students are: (left to right) Bonnie Olleren­ partly blocked), between the skis and the girl shaw, Paula O'Brien, Karen Lyons?, Ann The next letter came with the second in a robe, may be Karl Engstrom. Keller?, Anne Van Rensselaer, Susan Stalker, photo we used in last issue's "Identity What bothers me most is the fact that I can't and Moira Flannery. Crisis." The ones that follow it are from remember the cute girl sitting on my shoulders Paula O'Brien Stewart '63N classmates who recognized the setting. in the back row in the white sweater (no Brookfield, Wis. jacket). Oh, well-memories dim with age. To the editor: I remember the trip well, since I had just To the editor: I think that the " Identity Crisis" alumni barely learned to ski. We had a Norwegian Regarding the "Identity Crisis" on page 27 could have fun with the enclosed photograph exchange student, Per Svanoe, who en­ of the Spring 1979 issue, I have been able to which I took during an Outing Club ski trip to couraged and taught many of us. I'm certain identify five of the " ladies with the lamps." Old Forge in 1947. he was on the trip, but 1can't find his picture. The picture was probably taken during one of Just for starters, the lady between Bob I'll be interested in an y identities yo u our annual Christmas carol tours of Strong Rosbrough at the rear right is the outing produce. Memorial Hospital in 1960 or 1961. organizer, Miss Graham (Gram). After Frank Bob Pugh '47 From left to right: Bonnie Ollerenshaw, Dowd, Jane and Bob Dise, Bill Gay, Jonni Cincinnati, Ohio Paula O'Brien, Carol Neilson, Nancy Drake, Moore, Joe Sbero, Don Beatty, Joe Brandy, and (extreme right) Moira Flannery. Jean Cutler, Steve Jones.. .. I could go on ; but To the editor: Nancy Frieden Goad '63N let your readers take it from there. The Prince St. trip to Old Forge, probably Maryville, Calif. We enjoy getting the Rochester Review and 1946-47, was a happy annual event during the

22 mid- and late 1940's. The trips were chap­ eroned (Yes, Virginia, we did have chap­ erones.) by Hazel "Gram" Wilbraham and other staff. Gram is second from right in last row. (UR Vice President) Frank Dowd is to left of girl seated on his and Bill Gay's shoulders (at far left). Margaret Greene Kindig '47 Rochester, .Y.

To the editor: What a thrill to see smiling faces from the past. And how unfortunate that we have lost track of each other. Sylvia Nielson (front row in light jacket) was my roommate for a semester. She married Robert Etnyre and her last Christmas card came from a suburb of Chicago. Would love addresses of Sylvia and Alice Webster (to Sylvia's right) if anyone volunteers them. Dorothy Jean Cohen Landsman '47 Naples, N.Y. For Next Time ... For next time we'll give you an easy one-only two people to identify. Karl Kabelac in University Archives has an idea who these key people are, but would like verification. Anybody know?

23 News Digest o The University's eighth annual cele­ In scientific terms, the Rochester ex­ members each year, selected from appli­ bration of Joseph C. Wilson Day will be periment generated more than one bil­ cants all over the country, to spend one held this fall on Wednesday, Oct. 10. lion neutrons and temperatures of 67 year at the School of Nursing in order to Morning and afternoon lectures in million degrees with a burst of 1.65 study and practice primary health care, Hubbell Auditorium of Hutchison Hall trillion watts (terawatts) of power for a participate in joint practice with physi­ have been arranged by the Graduate fraction of a second. Previously, the best cian colleagues, develop research skills in School of Management on the theme: result attained at this power range had primary care, and study curriculum de­ "Social Justice and the Distribution of been 200 million neutrons using two velopment in primary health care. These Income." Guest speakers will include terawatts in 1977 at the Lawrence Liver­ faculty members are expected, after their Robert Nozick, professor of philosophy, more Laboratory. fellowship year, to be better able to teach Harvard University; Ronald Dworkin, The ultimate objective of the research students the skills of primary care. At professor of philosophy, University of is the development ofcommercial plants Rochester, nurses who have learned these Oxford; Peter Bauer, London School of generating electricity using the laser fu­ skills at the master's level are known as Economics and Political Science, Uni­ sion process. The neutrons produced by nurse practitioners or nurse clinicians. versity of London; and Anthony T. laser fusion produce tremendous heat Rochester is one of four sites through­ Kronman, Yale University Law School. which would be used to make steam to out the nation at which the training An evening program in the Eastman operate turbine electric generators. programs are being carried out. Theatre will feature the Eastman Wind Ensemble, the Eastman Chorale, and the o A gift from William E and Margaret o An address by Senator Daniel P. ESM Symphony Orchestra. David T W Scandling will be used to create the Moynihan on "Women and the Policies Kearns '52, chairman of the University's first endowed scholarship for the Gradu­ of Our Nation" and a panel discussion Board ofTrustees and president and chief ate School of Education and Human titled "How Far Have We Come?" featur­ executive officer of Xerox Corp., will Development. ing two authorities on women's studies­ speak. The first recipient of the Scandling Charlotte Conable of George Washing­ Wilson Day celebrates the life of the Scholarship is Dirk E. Wilmoth of Win­ ton University and Assoc. Prof. Elizabeth late Joseph C. Wilson '31, a former ston-Salem, N.C., who will begin study­ Fox-Genovese of the University of chairman of the University's Board of ing for the Ph.D. degree in education in Rochester-were held at the University Trustees and one of the University's the fall. The Scandling Scholarship will on June 28. The University-sponsored greatest benefactors. be awarded each year to one or two events were part of the Rochester com­ first-year doctoral students of outstand­ munity'S week-long celebration of the o A laser fusion energy experiment at the ing scholarly promise. issuance of the Susan B. Anthony coin. University's Laboratory for Laser Ener­ Mr. and Mrs. Scandling, who reside in During the panel discussion, Ms. Con­ getics has produced substantially greater Atherton, Calif., have been members of able, coordinator of Public Policy Proj­ results than expected, according to the Associates since 1969. Mr. Scandling ects of the GWU Women's Studies Pro­ Moshe Lubin, director ofthe Laboratory. is a founder and director of Saga Cor­ gram, analyzed political and social issues The development means that the poration of Menlo Park, Calif., and is with which Susan B. Anthony was iden­ "break-even" point, the point at which chairman of the Board of Trustees of tified, and Ms. Fox-Genovese, associate energy produced equals energy put in, Hobart and William Smith Colleges. professor of liberal arts and of history, now may be closer than had been Mrs. Scandling (the former Margaret commented on the current status ofthose forecast. Warner) is a member of the University's issues. "The experiment generated between class of 1944. She was a member of the Nancy Kennedy '41, an honorary five and 10 times the projected level," Trustees' Council from 1969 to 1975 and member of the University's Board of Lubin said, "and that indicates that laser has been an honorary member since Trustees, introduced the program. Mar­ system and fusion target design may 1975. Mrs. Scandling also has served on garet H. Baum, founding chairman ofthe strongly affect attainment ofbreak even." the Visiting Committee of the Graduate Friends of the University Libraries, was Achievement of break even would be an School of Education and Human Devel­ the moderator. affirmation of the scientific feasibility of opment since 1971. A special exhibit, "The Woman on the laser fusion. Coin: The Life and Work of Susan B. The School of Nursing has been The tests were conducted last spring at o Anthony," was on display in the foyer of awarded a grant of $505,930 by the the Laboratory, which is working to pro­ the University's Rush Rhees Library. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for duce energy by the fusion process using exhibit included materials from the Uni­ continued support of the University's laser light beams. The energy is gen­ versity's Library, which houses one ofthe participation in the Foundation's Nurse erated by shooting high-power lasers at a nation's important Anthony collections. Faculty Fellowship Program in primary minute target filled with tritium and Susan B. Anthony, a major figure in the health care. deuterium. University's history, was one of the As in the past three years, the grant allows five outstanding nursing faculty

24 Prof MosheJ. Lubin, director ofthe University's Laboratory/or Laser Energetics, explains a diagram ofthe People Fisher College; Walter Gilbert, American OMEGA laser system to U.S. Sen. Cancer Society Professor of Molecular Daniel Moynihan. Moynihan visited the Biology at Harvard University; and Ste­ laser lab before delivering an address at o Three alumni have been elected to the ven Weinberg, Higgins Professor of Phys­ the University's celebration ofthe University's Board of Trustees. ics at Harvard and senior scientist at the issuance ofthe Susan B. Anthony coin. Named to to-year terms on the Board Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. areA ngelo A. Costanza '51, president and chief executive officer of Central Trust o Dr. George L. Engel, professor of psy­ Rochester leaders who raised funds to Co., who is completing a six-year term as chiatry and medicine and co-director of assure the admission of women students alumni trustee; and Virginia A. Dwyer the Medical-Psychiatric Liaison Group, to the University. In 1900,when it seemed '43, assistant treasurer of the Earnings has retired after 41 years as a scholar, that the campaign would fall short by Division in the Treasury Department of teacher, physician, and researcher in $2,000, Miss Anthony pledged a life American Telephone and Telegraph Co. biopsychosocial medicine. insurance policy valued at that amount. G. Robert Witmer, Jr: '59, a partner in A member of the medical faculty since Later, additional funds were received, the Rochester law firm of Nixon, Har­ 1946, Dr. Engel is a graduate of Dart­ and Miss Anthony's insurance policy was grave, Devans & Doyle, will succeed mouth College and ofthe Johns Hopkins returned to her. Costanza as alumni trustee. He'll serve a University School of Medicine. He has Last February the University pre­ six-year term. been a leader in the development of sented the City of Rochester with a small psychosomatic medicine and is a world oil portrait of Miss Anthony, painted in o Honorary degrees were awarded to a authority in this field. A symposium in 1901, to be hung in the new City Hall on college president and two award-winning biopsychosocial medicine was held in Dr. extended loan from the University scientists at the University's 129th Com­ Engel's honor in June at the Medical collection. mencement ceremonies last spring. Center, and funds are being raised for the The recipients were the Rev. Charles J. establishment of the George L. Engel Lavery, C.S.B., president of St. John Professorship in Psychosocial Medicine.

25 o Dr. Haroutun M. Babigian has been o Gennaro J. Vasile has been appointed Riker; Marie Curran Wilson and Joseph appointed chairman of the Department executive director of the University's Chamberlain Wilson Professor of Politi­ of Psychiatry at the Medical Center. Strong Memorial Hospital. He succeeds cal Science, who was named dean of Dr. Babigian is a native of Jerusalem A llan C. A nderson, who now is president graduate studies in October 1978. and a graduate of the American Univer­ and chief executive officer of Lenox Hill A member of the faculty since 1967, sity of Beirut, Lebanon, where he re­ Hospital, New York City. Niemi is an authority on how people ceived B.Sc. and M.D. degrees. He came Vasile has been a senior associate and form political judgments and on the to Rochester's Department of Psychiatry director of hospital and health services theory of voting. in 1960 as a resident in psychiatry and management for the management con­ At Rochester, he has been chief eval­ joined the medical faculty as an instruc­ sulting firm ofBooz, Allen and Hamilton uator ofthe Rochester Plan for improve­ tor and fellow in psychiatry in 1963. International, Inc., Bethesda, Md. From ment of education in the health profes­ He was promoted to senior instructor 1975 to 1978 he was assistant provost sions, including medicine, since 1976. He in 1964, assistant professor in 1965, asso­ at the Medical College of Virginia in is a graduate of Lawrence College and ciate professor in 1969, and professor in Richmond. holds a Ph.D. degree from the University 1975. He has been deputy chairman of Vasile is a 1967 graduate of St. John of Michigan. the Department, director of its Division Fisher College. He holds the M.B.A. in of Clinical and Community Programs, hospital administration from Xavier o University photographer Chris T and director of the University's Commu­ University and the Ph.D. in hospital and Quillen has won his fifth award from the nity Mental Health Center. health administration from the Univer­ Recognition Program in Photocommu­ sity of Iowa. nications sponsored by the Council for the Advancement and Support ofEduca­ o Roger D. Lathan '54, director of devel­ o William B. Hauser, an authority on tion (CASE). opment since 1966, has been promoted to East Asian studies, particularly Japan, Quillen received a Citation Award in the new post of assistant vice president has been appointed chairman of the the 1979 Recognition Program for a for public affairs and director of Univer­ Department of History. photo essay on the intensive care nursery sity development. Hauser succeeds Assoc. Prof. Richard at Strong Memorial Hospital. Photo­ Judy Brown, director of public rela­ W Kaeuper, chairman since 1975, who graphs and an article written by Quillen tions, has been named director of Uni­ will return to teaching and research at appeared in the Summer 1978 edition of versity communications. She continues Rochester. During the 1979-80 academic the Rochester Review. In previous CASE to be responsible for public information, year, Kaeuper will be the R. T French competitions, Quillen's work has won media relations, and publications. Exchange Professor at Worcester Col­ three of the top "exceptional achieve­ James Armstrong '54, director of lege, Oxford University. ment" awards and a merit award. alumni affairs, has been appointed direc­ A member of the faculty since 1974, Seven public service announcements tor of University and alumni relations. Hauser has received 10 grants and fel­ produced by the University and aired on He assumes responsibility for new Uni­ lowships in support of his study of Japa­ local television also have received a 1979 versity activities in the area of commu­ nese history. These have included a Ful­ Citation Award for excellence from nity relations along with his work in bright Graduate Fellowship for study in CASE. Don W Lyon, senior public affairs alumni affairs. Japan, a National Endowment for the officer, wrote, produced, and narrated the Humanities Younger Humanist Fellow­ series. o Sanford Segal, professor of mathemat­ ship, a Japan Foundation Fellowship for ics, has been appointed chairman of the four months of study in Japan, and a o Jack A. Kampmeier, professor ofchem­ Department of Mathematics. He suc­ Mellon Faculty Fellowship from istry, has received a Senior Fulbright­ ceeds Gail S. Young, who will continue Rochester. Hays Research Scholar Award for study teaching and research at Rochester. Hauser came to Rochester from the at the University of Freiburg in West Segal, who joined the faculty as an University of Michigan, where he taught Germany. He will spend the 1979-80 instructor in 1963, has been associate for seven years. While there he received academicyear in West Germany studying chairman of the mathematics depart­ the Ruth M. Sinclair Award for Teaching the stereochemistry of oxy-substituted ment. In 1972-73 he was visiting lecturer and Counseling in Ihe Honors College of alkyl-free radicals. He also has received a at the University of Nottingham, Eng­ the College ofLiterature, Science and the NATO Senior Scientist Award in support land. He was a Fulbright research fellow Arts. He is a graduate ofthe University of of his work. in Vienna in IQ.65-66. Chicago and holds master's and Ph.D. He holds a B.A. degree from Wesleyan degrees from Yale University. o James 1. Doi, dean of the Graduate University and a Ph.D. degree from the School of Education and Human Devel­ University of. Colorado. He also did o Richard G. Niemi has been appointed opment, has been appointed dean of the graduate work as a Fulbright fellow at the chairman of the Department of Political College ofEducation at the University of University of Mainz (Germany) and at Science. He has been acting chairman Washington in Seattle. He will assume his the University of Chicago. since last fall. He succeeds William H. new post in October.

26 Hall Professional Corp., of Hanson, Mass.; Emmanuel C. Paxhia '54, lead engineer ofMcDonnell Douglas Corp. of McDonnell Aircraft Co., of St. Louis, Mo.; and Linda Freidank Taylor '67N, nursing consultant, Suffolk County De­ partment of Health Services, of Center­ port, N.Y William D. Ryan '49, president of William D. Ryan, Inc., of Rochester, was elected to fill the unexpired term of Edwin I. Colodny '48, chairman and chief executive officer of Allegheny Airlines, who had been elected to the Board of Trustees.

o University trustee Andrew H. Neilly, Jr. '47 has been elected chief executive officer of John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York City publishing firm. Neilly is the first chief executive officer from outside the Wiley family, which founded the company in 1807. He will continue to serve as president. Susan B. Anthony '38 (right) joined First Lady Rosalynn Carter and other dignitaries at Neilly was elected to the University's White House ceremonies marking the introduction ofthe new dollar honoring Miss Board ofTrustees in 1976after serving for Anthony 's great-aunt, the famed suffragist Susan B. Anthony. two years as a member of the Trustees' Council.

Doi was named dean at Rochester in Council, the senior alumni advisory 1971 after having served as professor of group to the Board of Trustees. Sports higher education at the University of Gleason succeeds Ivar A. Lundgaard Michigan and director of Michigan's '41, general manager of the Plastic Prod­ o The men's basketball team will playa Center for the Study of Higher ucts and Resins Department of E.!. 24-game schedule in the 1979-80 season, Education. Du Pont de Nemours and Co. beginning with home contests at the The new vice chairman, succeeding Louis A. Alexander Palestra against o Jean E. Johnson, R.N., Ph.D., has been Gleason in that office, will be D,: Richard Washington & Jefferson College on Dec. appointed professor of oncology in nurs­ J. Collins of Avon, N.Y 1 and Cornell University on Dec. 3. ing and associate director of the Univer­ New members elected to three-year Coach Mike Neer's squad then is the sity's Cancer Center. terms on the Council include Jess T. guest team in the Lincoln First Basket­ Casey '51G E, '58G E, dean of the School ball Tournament at the Rochester Com­ o H. Clint Davidson, Jr., director of em­ ofMusic at Winthrop College, Rock Hill, munity War Memorial on Dec. 4, 6, and 8. ployee relations at the University of S.c.; D,: Robert D. Coye '52M, dean of The schedule: Dec. 1, Washington & Jeffer­ Cincinnati Medical Center since 1976, the School of Medicine at Wayne State son ; Dec. 3, Cornell; Dec. 4,6, 8, Lincoln First University, Detroit, Mich.; R. Bruce Tournament (UR, Alfred, Brockport, Gene­ is the new director of personnel at seo, Hobart, Roberts Wesleyan, RIT, St. John Rochester. Davey '51, president of Hatch-Leonard, Fisher); Dec. 10, at LeMoyne; Dec. 13, Clark­ Inc., of Pittsford, N.Y; Annette Levin Lee son; Dec. 15, RIT; Jan. 5, Case Western o Vivian Littlefield Derby, R.N., Ph.D., '46, secretary ofDomine Builders Supply Reserve; Jan. 8, at Eisenhower; Jan. 12, Ober­ has been appointed associate professor of Corp., of Rochester, N.Y; Sallie Melvin lin; Jan. 15, at Elmira; Jan. 19, at Bucknell; Jan. 22, at Rensselaer; Jan. 24, at Hobart; Jan. nursing at the School of Nursing and '51, vice president of the Chemical Bank 28, at Army ; Feb. 2, Union; Feb. 6, at Buffalo; clinical chief of obstetrical and gyne­ of New York, of Stamford, Conn.; Feb. 12, St. Lawrence; Feb. 15, at Union; Feb. cological nursing at the University Medi­ Thomas E. Flynn '61, resident manager of 20, St. John Fisher at Rochester War Memo­ cal Center. Sperry-Univac Computer Systems in rial; Feb. 23, Colgate; Feb. 27, Hamilton; and East Syracuse, N.Y; John M. Keil '44 , Feb. 29, at Alfred. o James S. Gleason, secretary-treasurer executive vice president of Dancer-Fitz­ ofGleason Works in Rochester, N.Y, has gerald-Sample, Inc., of Nyack, N.Y; been elected chairman of the Trustees' John A. Norris '68, partner in Powers and

27 The past year has been a busy one for We'd also like suggestions for story you the magazine and we'll listen to your the Rochester Review staff. We've brought possibilities, as well as your comments opinions. We want to keep the Review a you profiles on alumni such as Peggy and criticisms. Whether you're a volun­ magazine of which you can be proud. Whedon of ABC's "Issues and Answers," tary subscriber or not, we'll keep sending musician Chuck Mangione, college pres­ ident Virginia Radley, and illustrator Enclosed is my voluntary subscription to Rochester Review. John "Tuck" Faulkner. We've also talked about education, from a look at a first day of anatomy class Name Class _ in the medical school to a psychologist's discussion of visual perception. And fac­ Address _ ulty members have shared views on the Middle East situation, the art of dance, the study of humanities, and "The Other City State Zip _ Side of Christmas." Many of these articles, including sev­ Mail to: Rochester Review eral in this issue, were made possible by 107 Administration Building the hundreds of you who were kind University of Rochester enough to send in a voluntary $5 sub­ Rochester, N.Y 14627 scription. The coupon below presents the opportunity again this year to join the list Make checks payable to the University of Rochester. of volunteer donors.

28 Alumnotes

chairman of the Board of Sybron Corp ., has received the Herman Schneider Award , the been elected chairm an of the Board of Security highest honor bestowed on an educator by the RC- River Campus colleges Trust Co., Rochester. . .. Robert M. Jacobs Cooperative Education Association. G - G raduate degree, River has retired from personnel relations, Kodak Campus colleges Office, Eastman Kodak Co., Roche ster. 1948 M - M.D. degree James W. Blumer has been promoted to exec­ GM -Gradu ate degree, Medi cine 1937 uti ve vice president, Libbey-Owens-Ford and Dentistry Gla ss Division , Toledo, Ohio. ... A new MR -Medical residen cy John H. Craft has retired from a management chapel (an addition to the existing church E - Eastman School of Music position at Xero x Corp. and has moved to Pinehurst, N.C. structure) has been dedicated to E. Robert GE - G raduate degree, Eastman Chable (G) , founding and senior minister of N - School of Nursing 1939 the Venice United Church of Chri st, Venice GN - G radua te degree, Nursing Gardens, Fla., and his wife, Marion. . .. U- University College Dr. Jacob Koomen ('45M), clinical professor of health administration in the School of Public Kathryn Sanney Cotner has been working in G U- Graduate degree, University Chicago since 1978 as account executive for College H ealth, Unive rs ity of North Ca ro lina at Chapel Hill, was present ed with the Dr. Arthur Industrial Scientific Conference Management, T. McCorm ack Award by the Association of division of Kiver Organization in Electronic State and Territ orial Health Officials. Packagin g and Production Trade Shows.... Beth Bishop Flory ('50G) is academic adviser River Campus 1941 and is in charge of student affairs for Russell Roger E. Drexel is vice president , plastic Sage Colle ge's Evening Division , Troy, N.Y. Colleges products and resins, at Du Pont Co., Wilming­ ton , Del. . . . Ivar A. Lundgaard, general man­ 1949 1911 ager of Du Pont Co.'s Plastic Products and Charles E. Boddie (G), clergyman and presi­ Marion MacLean Newhall was honored at Resins Department, has been reelected vice dent of the American Baptist College of the several events on her ninetieth birthd ay and chairman of the Society of the Plastics In­ Bible and American Baptist Theological Sem­ presented with a proclamation from Long dustry, Inc., a trade association. inary, Nashville, Tenn., ha s received the Island town and county governments recog­ Ge orge Arents PioneerMedal, Syracuse Uni­ nizing her many years of service to others. 1943 versity's highe st award to alumni. ... Stewart Agnes Nairn Nasmith Johnston recently had Cottier has been named vice president, fi­ 1917 poetry publi shed in Foreign Service Journal nance, Heritage Dental Laboratories, division James Sykes, pianist and former professor of and an article on George Mason publi shed in of Sybron Corp., Rochester. ... Betty Jane music at Colgate University, recently pre­ A lexandrian Magazin e. She was a research Neracker Davis, chairman of the mathematics sented a benefit conce rt at Memorial Cha pel in analyst-program officer for the U.S. govern­ dep artment at J. L. Mann High School , has Sherburne,N.Y., on behalf of the Co lgate ment from 1944to 1953; from 1953to 1966she been chosen Greenville County "Teacher of Chorus' European trip. traveled with her husband , Jam es R. Johnston, the Year" and one of four " honor roll" teach­ in the Foreign Service to Pakistan , Turk ey, and ers in the state of South Carolina . 1926 Costa Rica. Richard L. Greene, author and form er chair­ 1950 man of the University of Rochester's English 1945 Dr. John J. Castellot, Sr. ('54GM) has been department, received th e a nn ua l Lit er ar y William P. Ewald ('53G U), senior supervising app ointed director of medical service, Depart­ Award of the Friends of the Rochester Public development engineer, Eastman Kodak Co., ment of Medicine and Surgery, Veteran s Ad­ Library. has been chose n by the Optical Societ y of mini strati on , Washington, D.C. .. . Ray C. Am eri ca to re cei ve th e 1979 Ri chardson Johnson ('54G), Higgins Professor of Me­ 1927 Medal, an award which recognizes his con­ chanical Engineering, Worcester (Ma ss.) Poly­ Helen Proctor Martin is church librari an at tributions to applied optics and his service as a technic Institute, was elected to the National the First Assembl y of God Churc h in Clear­ teacher and consultant. Academy of Engineering of Mexico. The sec­ water, Fla. ond edition of his book Mechanical Design 1946 Synthesis-Creative Design and Optimization 1930 A. Robert Freed has been inducted into the was published in 1978, and a second edition of A $500 grant has been established in hon or of Smith , Knapp , French Industries, Inc. (Cleve­ his book Optimum Design ofMechanical Ele­ Guinevere Clarkson Curtiss by the Salisbury, land ) Outstanding Salesmen 's Club in honor ments is in press. Md., branch of the Ameri can Association of of exceptional profession alism and sales per­ University Women in recognition of her com­ formance. ... Richard R. Henty has been 1951 mun ity service. elected president of Oneida Savings Bank , Doris Blades Black, wife of Malcolm Black Oneida, N.Y. ('52), was elected city clerk of Placentia, Calif. 1936 . . . Frances Celentano is the author of a paper Donald A. Gaudion, direct or a nd fo rme r 1947 in the A merican Journal of A rt Therapy on Richard B. Bicknell has been appointed vice " Progression in Paintings by Schizophrenics." president and general mana ger of the Green­ . .. John H. Cope (G, '70G ) has retired as lee Tool Division of ExCell -O Corp.; he will assistant superintendent for personnel, Pitts­ CORRECTION also be respon sible for the firm's Forest City ford (N.Y.) School District. . .. Robert F. Tool Co. of Hickory, N.C. ... Mary Jane Witzel ('63G) has been appointed vice presi­ In the last issue of Rochester Review, Mort Kaiser Cronin has retired from the position of dent , finance , R. T. French Co., Roche ster. usbaum '35 was erro neo usly identified as forei gn affairs specialist in the U.S. Depart­ a stockbroker. Nusbaum is an investment ment of State , Washin gton. . . . James W. 1952 man ager. Rochester Review apologizes for Wilson (G), research director and Asa S. Dr. Theodore Anders ('56M ) has been elected the error. Knowles Professor of Cooperative Education chairman of the medical staff, Children's Hos­ at Northeastern Uni versity in Boston , has pital National Medical Center, Washington,

29 D.C. ... Lloyd J. Averill (G) , lecturer and 1956 1959 author, has been appointed dean of acade mic Rev. Richard W. Leavitt, following 12 yea rs of John M. Burgess (G) has been appointed vice affairs and professor of religious studies at service with the First Congr egational Church president of corp orate financ e, Kinney Dru gs, Barat College, Lake Forest, Ill. ... D. Allan in Newark Valley, N.Y., is now minister at St. Inc. , based in Gouverneur, N.Y. ... Major Bromley (G), Henry Ford II Professor and Paul United Church of Christ in Lanham, Md. Karl E. Nelson, associate dire ctor of Booth director of the Arthur Williams Wright Nu­ · .. W. Howard Levie and his co-author, Mal­ Memorial Medical Center, Flushing, N.Y., clear Structure Laboratory at Yale University, colm Flemin g, professors of education at In­ and a fellow of the American College of has been elected a Benjam in Franklin Fellow diana University and research associates at the Hospital Administrators, has been elected to of the Royal Society of Arts (Londo n); he was IU audio-visual center, have been awarded the the Board of Directors of the Health Systems on leave from Yale for 18 months as a Gug­ Associat ion for Educational Communication Agency of New York, N.Y. . .. Cindy Palabay genheim Fellow in Japan and a Humboldt and Techn ology's highest honor and the Na­ Robson is working as a design engineer for Fellow in Germany .. .. Beatrice Crookston tion al Society for Perform ance and Instru c­ Dyn ami c Controls Corp., South Windsor, Carter has established a private family therapy tion 's Communication- of-t he-Year Award for Conn.... George A. Salemi (G) has been practice in Beth el Park, Pa. . .. Elizabeth their book Instructional Message Design. promoted to the position of nati on al retail Varkony Coates has been elected president of marketing manager of the hom e imp rove­ Southwestern Ohio Education Assn.... Leroy 1957 ments gro u p, Sears, Roebuck a nd Co ., C. Stevens (G) , senior staff scientist at the Chic ago. Donald Disbrow (G) has retired as professor in Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me., is co­ the Dep artm ent of History and Philosophy at author of the book Teratomas and Chim eras. 1960 Eastern Michig an University after 30 year s of Rich ard W. Clark, former general manager of 1953 college teachin g. . .. Robert H.Donaldson (G ), former vice president of Clarion Capit al grocery products operations, Foremost Foods Frederick Hauser (G), chairman of the man­ Corp. , Cleveland , has been appointed presi­ Co., San Franci sco, has been promoted to vice ageme nt department, Gradu at e School of dent of Mercury Printin g Ink Corp ., Paterson , pre sident-controller of that compan y.. .. Business, Pace University, New York City, has N.J .... Sa ndra Beckman Fitterer is clinical Linda G. Gillim has been named director of been promoted to the rank of profe ssor. ... coordinator at the Center for Disorders of development for the Roche ster Philharmonic Gillis G. Pratt, Jr. has been named president of Communication , Med ical Center Hospit al of Orchestra. ... Marcia Kramer Gitelman has th e G albreath Mortgage Co ., Co lumbus, Vermont at Burlin gton ; she received her mas­ taken an adjunct facult y position in the techni­ Ohio. He also has been elected to a thr ee-year ter's degree in speech and language path ology cal mathematics department, Nation al Tech­ term on the Board of Trustees of the Urban in 1974 from San Francisco State University. nical Institute for the Deaf, Rochester Institute Land Institut e. ofTechnology. · .. Helen R. Gerhardt (G) , dire ctor of ele­ mentary educa tion for the City of Roche ster 1954 1961 School District for the past 12 years, has William R. Bush (G) has joined the staff of resigned from that position and will teach with Mary M. Alvermann has retired as supervisor Ohio State University as assistant vice presi­ the Roch ester Catholic Diocese.. .. Rich ard E. of the Veterans Administrati on Medi cal dent for educational resources and instruc­ Center's (Bath, N.Y.) home care unit. .. . Dr. tional development. .. . Lloyd Elliott was Hu ghs spoke at the 56th American Assembl y of Columbia University at Arden House, Har­ Berni e J affe is chairman of the surgery dep art­ guest conductor of the Merced Symphony at riman, N.Y., on "The Integrity of the Univer­ ment, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Merced College, Turlock, Calif. . .. Raymon d sity." He has been appointed commission er of Brooklyn, N.Y. ... Rev. James M. LeGro has W. Harrold is executive vice president of a committee to administer a deferred compen­ been appointed director of the Oak wood Maynard Plastics, Salem, Mass... . Ann E. Learning Center of the Northern Indi ana Prentice, dire ctor of the Gradu ate School of sation program for Nevada public employees. · . . Linda D. Robinson is associate chief of Conference of the United Methodist Church, Library and Inform ation Science of the Uni­ geriatrics at the Veterans Administration Med­ a residential adult learning center in Syracuse, versity of Tenn essee, was guest spea ker at the ical Center, Little Rock, Ark. Ind . . .. James M. Vail has been named 7l st commencement at Keuka College (N.Y.). dir ector of scientific affairs of the Ch emical Specialties Manufacturers Assn., Washington, 1955 1958 D.C. Patricia Kraut Fleischer has been appointed William W. Humm has been named manager, director of development for the San Francisco packa ged refrigeration systems, Frick Co., 1962 Opera.. . . Marianne Lewald Hutchinson and Waynesboro (Pa.) headquarters. . . . Diane Dia ne Gold Koenig has been promoted to her husband, Rev. William B. Hutchinson, Morrell J enkins has joined the University's associate professor of English at Columbia­ have been serving as United Meth odist mis­ Office of Alumni Relations as administrative Greene Community College . .. . Richard J . sionaries in Mexico since 1966. . . . Philip assistant to director James S. Armstrong, (' 54, S ug lia has been named president o f th e Keuper recently co mple te d four years at '65G). . .. Susan Storing Maybeck has re­ Fr anklin In suran ce Servic e Agency Inc., Brooklyn Law School and was admitted to.the ceived a master's degree from Colgate Roch­ Cleveland. New York State Bar. He hasjoined the firm of ester Divinity School and has been ordained to Stadd en, Arp s, Slate, Meagher and Flow in the ministry by the Hou se Church, an Ameri­ 1963 New York City.. .. Kenneth L. Minier is can Bapti st Church, Roch ester.. . . Dr. Fred­ Dr. Bern ard Can tor ('68M, '73MR) is head of produ ct systems techn ician at Procter and erick B. Parker ('62M), director of the Divi­ reproductive surgery, University of Miami Gambl e Paper Produ cts Co., Modesto, Calif. sion ofThoracic Surgery and associate profe s­ Medical Cent er. .. . James D.Cha pman has ... David T. Nelson (G), currently mayor of sor in the Department of Surgery, Up state been appointed manager ofengineering of the Decorah, Iowa, and chairman of the physics Medical Center, Syracuse, N.Y., was guest Mott Metallurgical Corp., Farmington, Conn. department at Luther College, has been ap­ speaker at the annual dinner of the Jefferson .. . Matthew Farina is a ped iatric cardiologist, pointed to a two-year term on the Governor's County chapter of the American Red Cross. Albany Medic al Center. . . . Henry C. Hinz has Science Advisory Council. ... Dr. Robert E. ... Dayton Vincent has been elected to the been named vice president, technical, R. T. O'Mara, professor of radiology and chief of American Meteorological Society's Commit­ French Co., Rochester. ... Tony Kerst is the the Division of Nucl ear Medicine at the Uni­ tee on Tropical Cyclones and Tropical Me­ media specialist for Bear Valley Unified versity of Roche ster Medi cal Center, has been teorology; he is scheduled to present two School District , Big Bear Lake , Calif. ... John elected president- elect of the American Col­ papers at an internation al meeting in Australia E. Walsh has been named principal of Jeffrey lege of uclear Physicians. on tropi cal cyclones. Elementary School in Madi son , Conn. .. .

30 Marc B. Weiss, who has been producer, direc­ Campaign.... David W. Martin, process engi­ Feb. 26.... to Dr. Hal and Ph yllis Koppel tor, or designer for over 250 stage , film, and neer, Ralph M. Parsons Co., Pasadena, has Helderman ('6 7), a dau ghter, Rosalind Sara h. television productions, is the designer of two been certified as a professional engineer in the . .. to David an d Eta S. Berner Weiss, a son, current Broadway hits, "Deathtrap" and state of Ca lifornia. . .. Commander Fred L. Daniel Haskell, on Feb. 20. " Bedroom Farce." ... Born: to Jane and Bru ce Mey er has received an M.S. degree in opera­ A. Hopkins (G), a son, Brent Weber, on tion s research from the U.S. Naval Postgradu­ 1968 March 14. ate School, Monterey, Calif., and is serving on Norma W. Bergman has bee n elected assistant the staff of the Naval Supply Systems Com­ corporate secretary, Scientific Atlanta, Inc.. .. 1964 mand in the Plans, Policy, and Progra ms Richard M. Byrne has finished his residency in Robert Calhoun is associate professor oflaw at Development Directorate, Washington, D.C. or tho pedic surgery at SUNY Upstate Med ical Golden Gate Uni versity School of Law in San . .. David J. O 'Brien (G), associate professor Center, Syrac use, N.Y. He is attending ortho­ Francisco. He has been cho sen "Outstanding of history, Holy Cross College, Worcester, pedic surgeon at U.S. Public Health Service Professor" by the graduating class for the past Mass., presented a talk on "Tradition and Hospital, Seattle... . Victor Chira (G) has two years.. . . Geraldine H. Cohen has been Change in Recent American Catholicism" at been named director of development at the appointed adjunct assistant professor of bio­ the University of Notre Dame as part of the Park Schoo l ofBuffalo... . Dr. David B. Jarrett chemistry at the University of Texas medical annua l spring meeting of the American Ca th­ has a private psychiatr y practice in Fores t Hills branch, Galveston , where she received an olic Historical Assn .... Kenneth L. Russ, and is on the staff of Long Islan d Jewish M.D . degree with high honors in 1979; she will licensed psychologist and clinical director of Hillside Hospital. ... Everett L. Larrabee (G) begin a pediatrics residency at the University the Behavioral Health and Therapy Center of has been appointed assistant superintendent, of Colorado Medical Center.... T homas K. St. Louis, is pre sident-elect of the Missouri administration , for the Pittsford ( .Y.) School Craine is executive vice president of D'You­ Psychological Assn ... . Walt er G. Sharrow (G) District. ... William J . Rapaport, assistant ville College, Buffalo.. .. John Denison has bee n named dean of the Co llege of Arts professor of phil osophy at SUNY (Fre do nia), ('69G), English literature and drama teacher at and Sciences at Ca nisius Co llege, Buffalo, has been awa rde d a $2,500 summer stipe nd Pittsford-Mendon (N .Y.) High School, was a N.Y. . .. Dick Wiederhorn (G) has been ap­ from the Na tional Endow ment for the Hu­ featured guest soloist at two Rochester Ora­ poin ted director of data processing, Emory manities to do resea rch on the semantics of torio Society performances at the Eastman University Hospital, Atlanta... . Born: to natural languages. . .. Paul T. Roth has bee n Theatre in March.. .. Irene M. Evans ('74GM) Hope Liebersohn, a son, Louis David, on Apri l appointed assistant director, hea lth affairs , in has been appointed director of the Animal 27, and a daughter, Hannah Laurel, on Feb. 16, the New York City mayor's Office of Op era­ Research Facility and promoted to assistant 1977.. . . to Mary Lee and Dr. Michael Weiss, a tions ... . Barbara Bockelmann Rundell ('79G) professor of oncology in pharmacology and son, Gregory Arthur, on March 25. has received a Ph.D. in micro bio logy from the toxicology and of laboratory animal medicine University of Rochester and has accep ted a at the University of Rochester Cancer Center. 1966 teaching position at William Rain ey Harper ancy T. Go rham Farina has been ap­ Donald Cruikshank (G, '70G), associate pro­ College, Palatine, Ill. ... Carol Shiffman is pointed chairman ofthe Department of Physi­ fessor of physics , Anderson (Ind.) College, was artis tic director of Momentum Dance Co ., cal Therapy of Russell Sage College, Troy, selected by Lilly Endowment, Inc. as one of36 which will open a new studio in Los Angeles. N.Y. ... Susan Kenn edy is poet-in-residence pa rticipa nts in a faculty workshop on the . .. Kenneth Small is on leave from Princeton at Brook side Elementary School, San An­ "Concept and Methods of Illuminative Eval u­ University for a one-year ap pointment as selmo , Calif., as part of the California Poets­ ation." .. . Th eodore F. Feldman has formed research associate, eco nomic studies, Brook­ in-the-Schools Program. . .. Alvie B. Kidd the law firm of Raymond, Schneider, Frank & ings Institution, Washington, D.C. .. . Bruce J. ('69G) is corporate director of industrial rela­ Feldman, with offices in New York and New Wells is an ind ustria l water-treatment consul­ tions, Sybron Corp., Rochester. . .. Rich ard Jersey; he also has completed a master's de­ tant, Dearborn Chemical, Taco ma, Wash., Ognibene (G, '73G) is dea n of graduate and gree in' taxation at New York University's desig ning coo ling and waste-wa ter treatment continuing studies, the Co llege of Saint Rose, School of Law .. . Barbara J. Trombley Fit­ systems. .. . Wayne D. White is mastery learn­ Albany, N.Y. ... Francis J . Pilecki (G, '67G) terer ('67G) graduated with a mas ter of divin­ ing coordina tor, Loop Ca mpus of City Co l­ has been named president ofWestfield (Mass.) ity degree from Wesley Theological Seminary, leges of Chicago, where he teaches in the State College.. .. Suza nne Cohen Schlossberg Washington, D.C., and was ordained an Epis­ physical science department. . .. Born : to has been in the antiquarian book business copalian priest at St. Paul's Cathedral, Bos­ Maureen and Dr. David B. Jarrett, a son, Pau l, since 1975, specializing in children's illustrated ton, Mass.. .. Alan Warren Friedman (G), in Janu ary. ... to Douglas ('68, '77G) and books and first editions in literature. professor of Eng lish, University of Texas, is Barbara Bockelmann Rundell, a dau ghter, aut hor of Mu ltivalence: The Mora l Quality of Chris tine Elizabeth, on March 7... . to Martin 1965 Form in the Modern Novel, published by and Madelyn Pullman Schloss, a son, Jesse Joan Jacobs Brumb erg has been appointed Louisiana State University Press. .. . John J . David, on Apri l 17. .. . to Paul and Laura assistant professor, Women's Studies Program, Hi ggins (G) has been promoted to vice presi­ Gordon Siegelbaum ('70 RC) , a daughter, Jill, College of Arts and Sciences, Cornell Univer­ dent of United States Trust Co. of New York. on Dec. 22, 1978. sity; her Ph.D. dissertation received honorable . .. Bo rn : to Jane Zimelis ('67) and Dr. mention for the 1979 Brewer Prize of the Lawrenc e J. Cohe n, a son, Todd Adam, on Jan. 1969 American Society for Church History and will 21. Dr. Stephen M. Barolsky has joined a private be published by the Free Press in 1980... . cardiology practice in Youngstown, Oh io. .. . Edward E. Foste r (G) has been appointed dean 1967 E. Han Kim (G) has been visiting associate of the faculty at Whitman College, Walla Eta S. Bern er has been promoted to associate professor of finance at the Un iversi ty of Chi­ Walla, Wash. He hold s a joint appointment as professor of health professions ed ucation, cago Graduate School of Business and will professor of Engli sh and humanities.. .. Art University of Illinois Medical Center. .. . return to Ohio State University as associate Fried (G) is budget officer, National Institute Prudence Ann Gay is manager ofa health food professor, finance. . .. George R. Michaels of Child Health and Human Development, store in Hawaii. ... Dr. Hal Helderman is (G), account executive in the Ge neva, N.Y., Bethesda, Md.; he also commands a Coast director ofthe Renal Immunology Laboratory, office of Loeb Rh oades, Hornblower & Co., Guard Reserve unit in Baltimore.. .. Rich ard University of Texas Medical School, Dallas. has been named to the firm's management T. Holl eran is controller, Bush- Hog Irrigation ... Dan Schesc h, personnel manager, Com­ advisory board.. .. Dr. Joel Allan Yellin Division, Allied Products Corp., Upland, posite Can Division, Boise Cascade Co ., has ('73M) has completed his residency in general Calif.. .. Dr. Lawrenc e M arkus of Penfield, been elected to a term on the city of St. Louis surgery at Downstate Medical Ce nter and is N.Y., has accepted chairmanship of the new school board.... Born: to Richard and Sally leadership division of the 1979 Israel Bond Parker Hartman, a son, Andrew Walter, on 31 entering the private practice of surgery in has been named an associate ofthe Buffalo law Che mica l Society, Col umbus, Ohio. ... Cap­ Rochester. He is on the staff at Rochester firm of Magavern, Magavern, Lowe, Bei­ tain Norman S. Bull (G) has been awarded the Ge neral Hospital. ... Born : to Roberta Plut­ lewech, Dopkins & Fadale.. .. Anders H. Meritorious Service Medal for service as the zik and eil Baldwin, a son, Nicholas Horatio, Henriksson received his Ph.D. from the Uni­ assistant chief of staff for resources manage­ on March 8.... to Dr. Stephen M. Barolsky versity of Toronto and is an assistant professor ment for the chief of Naval Air Training, a nd Phyllis Wright Barolsky ('7 1R C), a of history on the facu lties of the University of Corpus Christi, Tex... . Deborah S. Hardy is a daughter, Rachael Beth , on Oct. 14, 1978. ... Toro nto and McMaster University. . . . Andrew marketing cons ultant covering Vermont and to Doris and Dr. Steve Borrus, a son, Dani el T. Kitchen (G) has been promoted to associa te New Ham pshire for Continental Telephone; Scott, on Dec. 27, 1978... . to Antho ny and professor of mat hematics at St. John Fisher she is based in Spr ingfield , Vt, . .. Paul G. Barbara Fine Mittiga, a daughter, Ruth Eliza­ College, Rochester. .. . Donald J . Massa has Kreuzer has jo ined the English department at beth, on Marc h 10. bee n elected director of market research. Se­ Northeastern University.. .. Martin Morris­ curity New York State Corp., Rochester. .. . sey is a pilot for American Airlines, Dallas. ... 1970 Edward Maz eika (G) , assistant professor of Rochelle Robbin s is visiting assistant professor Lawrence A. Belli is a park ranger at G len English at Morningside College, was named in clinical psychology at the University of Canyon (Ariz .) National Recreation Area. He "Faculty Person ofthe Year" by the students at Florida.... Ava Albert Schnidman has been received an M.S. degree in wildland recreation the college. .. . Dr. Linda Mueller is a resident named assistant director of field and account management fro m the Unive rsity of Idaho in in family practice at Brookhaven Memorial services, group insurance operations, Connec­ 1977. .. . Bob Berk y, mime ar tist, spent eight Hospital, Patchogue, N.Y .. .. Major Richard ticut Ge neral Life Insurance Co ., Waterbury, weeks in Port Lavaca, Tex., as an Alcoa D. Paprowicz (G) has received the secon d Conn. . .. Charles B. Tewksbury has received Affiliate Artist giving a series of free perform ­ award of the Meritorious Service Medal at an M.S. degree from Central Connecticut ances for vario us organiza tions.. .. Paul D. Altus Air Force Base, Okla ., for superior State College, New Britain; his degree is in Boehm has received a Ph.D. degree in chemi­ performance as chief of crew control, Fourth teaching English to speakers of other lan­ cal oceanography fro m the U niversity of Military Airlift Squadron at McChord AF B, guage s.... Marriage: Rochelle L. Robbin s and Rhode Island ; he is in cha rge of the ocean Washington... . Thomas W. Parks received a J. William Ju stusson on June 30 in ew York sciences group, Energy Resources Co., Ca m­ master of architecture degree from the Uni­ City . . .. Born : to Marshall (G) and Barbara bridge, Mass. .. . Robert A. Cashner (G) has versity of New Mexico School of Architecture Coleman Drum ('76N), a daughter, Jocelyn been named vice president , Citizens and South and Planning; he is work ing for the firm of Elizabeth, on Jan. 25. . . . to Jeffrey M . and Nation al Bank ... . Judith Wagner DeCew is Don ald A. Kru eger, AlA, Alb uquerq ue. .. . Regina Lansing Rubin ('nRC), a son, Adam assistant professor of philosophy at Massa­ Clayton M. Press was appointed senior re­ Jeremy, on May 28. .. . to Lowell and Paula chu setts Institut e of Technology.... Mark J. search editor of Follett Publishing Co ., Chi­ Lapin Seifter, a son, Gabriel, on June 5. ... to Kalin is a registered architect in Massachusetts cago. . . . Dani el S. Sapon has been named Bradley and Robin Ellison Tammes, a daugh­ and is working at Brown Daltas & Associates, director of Philadelphia's Museum of Ameri­ ter, Ho lly Beth.... to Catherine and Thomas Cambridge. ... David A. Kostizak, assistan t can Jewish History.... Pet er H. Scholnick is a R. Watson (G), a daughter, Elizabeth, on director at the University of Rochester's Labo­ planning con sultant with Abt Associates; he Feb . 19. ratory for Laser Energetics, has bee n ap­ recen tly directed a major planning study in pointed, in addition, assistant director of the Boston's Sou th End for the Boston Redevel­ 1973 University's Office of Research and Project opment Autho rity.. .. Frederic A. Shepard Karen Andresen has received an American Admi nistration.. .. Peter Laska (G) was a received an M.D. degree in 1978 an d is a Association of University Women Fellowship featured guest poet of the Cultura l Cen ter in resident in family practice at the University of for her final year of work on her dissertation in Cha rleston, W. Va. .. . Eliezer Alan Parkoff South Ca rolina, Charleston.. . . Dr. James American history at the Universi ty of New was ordained as a rabb i at the Torah Oh r Terzian has passed specialty boa rds in pathol­ Hampshire.. .. Lt. Col. Jerome R. Baxter has Seminary in Jeru salem. . .. Robert Sachs is ogy and is on the staffs of Upstate Medical been appointed assistant for test and evalua­ direc tor ofcorporate deve lopment, Co ntinen­ Cen ter, Syracuse, N.Y., and Auburn Memorial tion for the Air Force Wright Aeronautical tal Cab levision, Inc., Findlay, Oh io... . Gary Hospital. .. . Robert S.Topor (G) has been Laboratories, Wright Patterson AFB, Ohio.... H. Smith ('76G) is chief accountant, J. A. elected to the Board of Directors and treasurer Cynthia Dawson has been branch per sonnel Jones Construction Co. , Charlotte, N.C. ... of Wright-Patt Credit Union, Ohio.... Me­ manager for Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd. since Born : to Apostolou and Gary H. Smith, a lissa Perry Upton received an M.D. degree 1978. ... Elizabeth Elias has been named daughter, Nicole, on Oct. 10, 1978. fro m Northwestern University Medical circulation manager for Florida Sportsman School in 1978 and is a reside nt in pathology at magazine, Miami. .. . Diane Goldkopf has 1971 No rthwestern with special interest in nutrition received a Ph.D. degree in counseling from Ilene Amy Berg has been prom oted to man­ and chemical carc inoge nesis.... Thomas H. Washington State University and has begun a ager, broadcast publicity, East Coas t, ABC-TV Williams, ed itor of the Roche ster weekly one-year postdoctoral fellowship in clinical pub lic rela tions in New York.... Ethel Ehren­ newspaper City/ West and reporter for its sister psychology at Elizabeth (N.J.) General Hospi­ preis Cantor (G) received a bachelor of design paper, City/East, received the 1978 New York tal Community Mental Health Center. . .. Dan degree from the College of Architecture, Uni­ Press Association Award for " best in-depth McKatz, staff member of the California State versity of Florida... . David L. Cleveland is reporting." ... Born : to Renee Bergmann and Adoption Service , has received a state license practicing law in Cleveland with the firm of William S. Andrews, a daughter, Leigh Smiley, as a marriage, family, and child counselor. . .. Goodman, King, & Cleveland . . . . Ella Funk on Feb. 13in Rochester. . .. to Bonita and Car y Joseph P. Novek received a doctor of podiatric Cleveland ('nG) received a Ph.D . degree from W. Blume, a son, Matthew Joseph, on May 20. medicine degree from the Illinois College of the Education College of Case Western Re­ . .. to David S. and Rise Epstein, a son , Podiatric Medicine in Chicago. . .. Florence serve University and is consultant for Benjamin Marcus, on April 16.... to Allen J. Seldin (G) has been promoted to the position the Cleveland Board of Education. . .. Sister ('70 RC) and Ann Weiss Schwalb, a da ughter, of director of elementary educa tion , Pittsford Trinita DiGiacomo (G) is principal ofa mid dle Julia Emily, on March 3.. .. to Dr. Mark and Schoo l District. .. . Eileen J .Lewis T homas school in Baltimore. ... David S. Epstein Julie Kazarian Strauss, a son, Brian Jonathon, has entered the Simmons College (Boston) ('nG) is a consultant for American Manage­ on Ju ly 20, in Portsmouth, Va.. . . to Dr. Louis graduate program in management. . .. Jim ment Systems, Inc., Arlington , Va.. .. Joan and Carol yn Anderson Young, a daughter, Thorne has entered a Ph.D. program at Yale Lucks Feinstein is practicing corpo rate law Shannon, on June 2. School of Forestry and Environmental Stud­ with the firm of Tru bin Sillcocks Edelma n & ies. .. . Richard C. Weiss has received an M.D . Knapp, New York City. . . . Louis A. Haremski 1972 degree from the Hahnemann Medical College Robert Benzel ('74G) is a programmer, re­ and Hospital ofPhiladelphia; he will complete 32 searc h and deve lop men t division, American an internal medici ne reside ncy at Montefiore Hospital, Pittsburgh. . .. David A. Wolfe is Kent State Children's Mental Health Center. glish at Wofford College, Spartanburg, S.c. completing an internship in clinical and com­ ... Barbara Holtzman has begun a master's · .. William A. lIer, formerly sales representa­ munity psychology at the University of Missis­ program at Smith College following a trip to tive, Philip Morris U.S.A., now is combination sippi Medical Center, Jackson.... Sara Youn­ Hong Kong and China.... Kenneth S. Ho rth area manager, Syracuse, N.Y., for that com­ german has joined the Rochester (N.V.) has graduated from Case Western Reserve pany.... Leonard Jason (G) is an assistant Democrat and Chronicle staff as a general School ofMedicine and has begun a residency professor at Chicago's DePaul University.. .. assignment reporter. .. . Born : to Janet P. and in internal medicine at Northwestern Memo­ Richard Kadin has received an M.S. degree in L. David Straus, a daughter, Alissa Diane, on rial Hospital, Chicago.... Robert A. Lev ine architecture from the Universi ty of Pennsyl­ March 30 in Richmond, Va. graduated from Boston University Law School vania Graduate Schoo l of Fine Arts. . .. Rich­ and is a staff attorney-instructor at the Univer­ ard L. Klein has received a J.D. degree from 1974 sity of Tennessee Legal Clinic, Knoxville.... Columbia University School of Law, where he Dr. Leslie Jane Aspis is opening a dental Gary P. Marchese is employed by United was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar for the past practice in Manhattan.... Dr. H arry D. States Steel Corp. as a mechanical engineer for two years; he will begin a two-year appoint­ Burack has graduated from Albany Medical pollution abatement projects. . .. J ohn B. ment with the Hon. Charles S. Haight, Jr., U.S. College and is a first-year resident in internal McCabe received an M.D . degree from SUNY district judge for the Southern District, New medicine, St. Louis University Hospital. ... Upstate Medical Center and will be an intern York, N.Y .. .. Lt. Joseph Long graduated Donald Edge (G) has been appointed director and resident in emergency medicine in Day­ from the Naval Justice School, Newport, R.I., of the New Jersey Basic Skills Assessment ton, Ohio. . .. Ann Moses has received a J.D. and is assigned to the U.S.S. Talbot in the Program for the Department of Higher Edu­ degree from New England School of Law, Middle East. ... Lt. Andrew Maroney, USN, cation.... Rocco Fiato (G) has been named a Boston . ... Kathy Mueller is working in a pilot has been assigned as communications officer project scientist at Union Carbide's Charles­ supportive treatment program designed to on the U.S.S. Mullinnix, which completed a ton, W. Va., Technical Center. ... Lt. Bruce R. help child-abusing parents at the Hillside six-month deployment to the Indian Ocean­ Goulding is on one-year duty with the Navy in Children's Center, Roche ster. ... Gloria Pe­ Persian Gulf in January. ...Harvey M. Rich­ northern Europe as executive officer aboard terson, public relations assistant at the Univer­ mond has completed a master's degree in the U.S.S. Illusive. ... Cynthia J ewett, former sity of Rochester, has been promoted to assis­ public administration at the University of district attorney, Alameda County, Ca lif., is tant director of pu blic relations. ... Dr. Pa tric e North Carolina at Chapel Hill; he is a finalist now deputy district attorney, Monterey S. Punim is studying or thodontics at UCLA. in the Presidential Management Internship County; she graduated from Hastings College .. . J ean A. Sa int-Cyr (G, '17G) has been Program and will be working at the U.S. ofLaw in 1917... . Jerry Koch is working with appointed assistant professor, Department of Environmental Protection Agency as an envi­ Movement for a New Society, Philadelphia, a Anatomy, University of Toronto Medical ronmental scientist. social change organization... . Howard Kohn School. She is also researching neuroanatomy has received an M.S. degree in electrical and neurophysiology at Playfair Neuroscience 1977 . engineering from Rutgers University and has Unit, Toronto Western Hospital. . . . Andrew Juanita-Elizabeth Carroll has been elected accepted a position with General Electric, M. Scala (G , '17GM) is assistant director of student government president at Colgate steam turbine division, Lynn, Mass.. .. Steven new drug development, Pfizer Pharmaceuti­ Rochester Divinity School, Bexley Hall, Lazaru s (G) has been appointed director, J. R. cals, New York City . .. .Amy Sc hecter has Crozer Theological Seminary; she is a second­ B. Associates , Inc., Denver, a national research joined the stage management staff of Joseph year student in the master ofdivinity program. and management consulting firm.... Robert Papp's New York Shakespeare Festival · .. Elenore Diedreck has received a master's Schlichtig received an M.D. degree from St. Theatre.. .. J osephin e Williams has received degree from the University ofWashington; she Louis University. ... Michael Shepard was an M.D. degree from St. Louis University.. .. graduated as class valedictorian. .. . Alan ordained rabbi, teacher, and preacher at the Marriages: Andrew M. J acobson to Susan M ichae l Grupp has received a master of busi­ 85th commencement of the Jewish Theologi­ Bogen on March 25. .. . Ruby M. Leppo to ness administration degree from the Univer­ cal Seminary of America; he is a teacher at William E. Rosenthal on March 25 in New sity of Chicago Graduate School of Business, Temple Israel Hebrew High School, Great York City. ... Dr. Patrice S. Punim to Dr. where he specialized in marketing and con­ Neck, N.Y.. .. Cal Steinmetz has entered into Daniel Levin on Jan. 7.... Born : to Vicki and centrated in finance, and is working at Bee­ a partnership for the general practice of law in Eric S. Walter, a son , Nicholas Daniel, on cham Products, Pittsburgh, as an assistant Washington, D.C., and is specializing in con­ May 28 in Rochester. brand manager. ... Leslie Kar en H amlin stitutional issues.... Rebecca W. Wadsworth graduated from At lanta University School of has been accepted into the University of 1976 Business and has been inducted into Beta Rochester Schoo l of Medicine and Dentistry, David R. Brown is recorder instructor and Gamma Sigma; she is working for Eli Lilly & class of 1983.... Susan Sokol Welt is a systems director, Callanwolde Recorder Consort at Co. , Indianapolis.. .. Mark Hinman (G), who engineer, IBM Corp., Rochester. .. . Mar­ Callanwolde Arts Center, Atlanta; he is com­ is employed at Rome (N .Y.) Strip Steel, has riages: Dr. Harry D. Burack to Susan St. pleting work on a Ph.D. degree in pharma­ been appointed to the Rome Planning Board. Angelo in August 1978... . Susan Ann So kol cology at Emory University. .. . Howard N. · .. James D. Lavin has received a master's to Stephen Welt on May 4 in Rochester. Cayne has graduated from Washington Uni­ degree from the University of Chicago School versity School of Law and is an attorney with of Social Service Administration and is a case 1975 the Comptroller of the Currency, Washington, worker with the Salvation Army, Family Ser­ Dr. Joan Carroll has received an M.D. degree D.C. ... Navy Lt. G.g.) J ames S. Fasoli, J r. has vices Division, Chicago.... Karen J. M ales from SU Y Upstate Medical Center and is an returned from the Mediterranean, where his received a master of business administration intern at Cambridge Hospital. She will be a ship participated in training exercises . ... Jane degree from the University of Chicago Gradu­ resident in anesthesia at Massachusetts Gen­ Fineberg received an M.S. degree in health ate School of Business , where she concen­ eral Hospital. . ..Anthony J. Damelio, J r. care administration from George Washington trated in marketing and finance; she is assist­ received a J.D . degree from Ohio Northern University; she is also a medical care adminis­ ant brand manager for Frito-Lay Co., Dallas. University College ofLaw in 1978; he has been trator for the New York State Office of Health · .. Ron Spadafora is teaching social studies admitted to the Ohio bar and has been ap­ Systems Management in White Plains . . . . and coaching football, baseball, and wrestling pointed law clerk to Judge Anthony J. Cele­ Stephen Gree nspan (G), assistant professor of at a junior high school; he is also playing on a brezze, U.S. Court of Appeals for the sixth psychology, Peabody College, Nashville, semipro football team . ... Mimi Zales re­ circuit, Ohio .... Jim Davis is a process Tenn., has been appointed a fellow of the ceived a master of business administration development engineer in the paper mill, Center for the Study of Youth Development, degree from the University ofChicago Gradu­ Kodak Park, Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. Boys Town, Nebraska.... Ed He nry (G) has ate School of Business and is a marketing ... David Glenwick (G , '76G) is director of been promoted to associate professor of En- 33 repr esent ative at IBM in Chicago.. ..Mar­ 1951 1974 riages: Erick G. Bond to Nancy Barry ('7 8N) Dr. Richard H. Watson (M) has been ap­ Dr. Thomas R. Spitzer (M) is teaching intern al on May 5 in Webster, N.Y. .. . Thomas F. pointed associate professor of pediatri cs and medicin e at No rtheastern Medic al Colle ge Check to Alice Phillips on May 26 in Hampton , associa te director of studen t health at the and is practicing internal medicine in Ca nton, Va. . .. Sumiko Kawamura to Victor W. Kel­ U niversi ty o f Al ab ama Me d ical C enter, Oh io. He was marr ied to Joan Winth rop melis, Jr. on April 7 in Inglewood , Ca lif... . Birmin gham. Nic kerso n on Au g. 27, 1978, in Falm outh, Melinda Moyer to Payl M. Whitbeck on May 5 Mass. in Rochester. 1952 Dr. John William Hein (GM), director of the 1976 1978 Forsyth Dental Cent er, Boston , was award ed Marriage: Dr. Cra ig A. Sinkinson (M) to Dr. Sue Bollmann (G) , forme r head ofthe Univer­ an honorary doctor of science degree by Marilee J . Kuraci na (M) on May 26 in End i­ sity of Rochester's Man agement Libr ary, now Am erican Intern at ion al Co llege in Spring­ cott, N.Y. heads the Univers ity's Office of Instituti on al field, Mass. Studies.. .. Jerry S. Parker is research ing and 1977 teaching American sign langua ge at the Open 1953 Dr. Lenore M. Buckley (M) , second-year resi­ University, Washin gton, D.C. He is an inter­ Dr. Donald G. Langsley (M) has been elect ed dent in medicine and pediatrics at the Scho ol pret er at G eor ge Washington U nivers ity, president- elect of the Am erican Psychi atri c of Medicine at the University of North Caro­ Ca tholic U nive rsi ty, G all audet Co llege, Association. lina at Ch apel Hill, was awarded the Henry C. Model Second ary School for the Deaf, and Fordham Award for her dedication to med i­ Kend all Dem onstration Elementary School 1957 cine. ... Born : to Drs. Gregory (M) and and is completing an M.A. program in schoo l Dr. C. McCollister Evarts (M, '64MR), Dorris Kathleen Friend (M) Gensheimer, a daughter, coun seling for the hearin g imp aired.. .. Levi H. Carl son Professor of Orthopaedics at the on March 5.. .. to Dr. James (M) and Martha A. Reiter (G) is a postdoc toral N. I.H. fellow at University of Rochester Medical Center and Wettemann Powers, a daughter, Meredith Kansas University Med ical Center's Depart­ chairman of ortho pae dics and ortho paedist­ Marj orie , on March 10. ment of Otorhinolaryngology; he is also activ­ in-chief at Stron g Memori al Hospital, has ities coo rdina tor, Ch abad House of Kansas been elected to a five-year term on the Board 1978 City, an interna tional Jewish youth organiza­ of Orthop aedic Surgery. He also has been Marriage: Dr. Richard D. Blondell (M) to tion.. .. Peter K. Sprague is a process engineer, elected a governo r of the Am erican Co llege of Marj orie Norton on May 19 in Rochester. Sun Oil Co., Marcu s Hook , Pa. ... Marriage: Surgeons and was appointed to the instruc­ Bruce Epstein to Melinda A. Hornburg on tion al course committee of the Am erican March 31 in Cleveland.... Born : to Ren ee Academy of Orthop aedic Surgeons. Eastman School and Levi A. Reiter, a daughter, D'vorah Leah . 1959 of Music 1979 Dr. Carl M. Ha rris (M) has been nam ed chi ef Peter Chryssos is assistant personn el manager, of ortho paedics and chairm an of the Depart­ 1926 Columbia Pictures Industries.. .. Lee Krenis ment of Orthopaedic s at Th e Genesee Hospi­ Katherine M. Palmer of Fillmore, N.Y., has (G), former assistant director of publi c re­ tal, Rochester. '" Dr. Raymond T. Moore retired from pian o teaching after 60 years of lations at the Unive rsity of Rochester, is a (G M) was installed as state health commis­ instruction. feature writer for the Rochester (N .Y.) sioner of Texas. Times- Union. 1931 1960 Rosamond Tanner Albert has been orga nist in Dr. Joseph A. Kochen (M) has been appointed a spiritualist church in Connecticut for 22 professor of pediatrics at Cornell University years, and for the past three years has been Medicine and Medical College; he also is attending pediatri­ composing music. cian and chief of the Division of Pediatric Dentistry Hem atology an d Onc ology at orth Shore 1935 University Hospital, Manh asset, N.Y. Ru th Bellat i ('37G E) was presented with an 1945 honorary degree by Illinois College (J ackson­ Dr. Nevin Scrimshaw (M), pr ofessor a nd 1965 ville) for her involvement in the development director of Massachu setts Institute of Technol­ Dr. Daniel Gottovi (M) has been elect ed of the mu sic departments of both MacMurray ogy's Intern ation al Nutrition Program , was president of the No rth Ca rolina Th or acic College (J acksonville) and Illinois College , as awar ded an hon orary doctorate by Toku shima Society. well as her dedication to community music U niversity, Tokush im a, J ap an , for hi s re­ pro grams.. .. Willia m A. Campbell has retired search. He also received the Med al of Hon or 1970 as professor of music and dep artment chair­ ofthe Fundacion F.Cu enca Villoro , Zar agoza, Dr. Charles B. Rodnin g (M) completed a man at Ore gon State University.... M illard Spain , for his work in hum an nutrition. general surgery residency at, and received a Taylor, professor of violin for 35 years at the Ph.D . degree in anatomy from , the University Eastman School of Music, has received the 1948 of Minnesota Health Scienc es Center. He has University of Rochester's Alumni Citation to Dr. Marvin A. Epstein (M) has been elected been commissioned as lieut enant commander, Facult y for outstanding teaching, scholarship, chief of med icine, John Muir Memori al Hos­ U. S. Navy Medical Corp s, and assigned to the and contribution to student life; Taylor has pital, Walnut Creek, Ca lif., and has been aval Medical Research Institute, Bethe sda , retired from the Eastman faculty. reelect ed chief of cardiology. Md . 1936 1949 1972 The Arthur Whittemore (GE) and Jack W. Alejandro Zaffaroni (GM), president and chief Dr. Richard J. Morris (M) is a practicmg Lowe (' 38, '39GE) piano duo is currently executive officer of Alza Corp. , Palo Alto, clinic al immunolo gist and allergist in Min­ taping a television series for public television. Calif., received the I979 Chemical Pion eer neapolis.. .. Marri age: Dr. Richard B. Everso n Award given by the American Institute of (M) to JoAnn Gi ord ano on May 5 in Ston y 1937 Chemists. Creek, Conn. Frederick Fennell ('39GE) directed the Cleve­ land Symphonic Winds in the recording ofthe 34 album "Frederick Fennell and the Cleveland Symphonic Winds"; he conducted the Kansas 1944 1951 University Symphonic Band in a winter con­ Soprano Ruth Cleve la nd Lakeway ('47GE), Pianist J ean Abramson (G E,'65G E), professor cert at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall; professor of mu sic at Skidmore College, was a of mu sic at Wartburg College (Waverly, Iowa), and he was guest conductor for a Houston guest artist at the spring concert of the Pleas­ presented a faculty lecture-recital at Liem ohn Symphony concert sponsored by the Bay Area antville, N.Y. , Cantata Sin gers at Pleasantville Hall o f Mu sic, Waverl y.. . . Percu ssionist­ Symphony League at the University of Ho us­ Presbyterian Church.. .. Alto Virginia Lewis co mposer T heodore Frazeur ('56GE), a faculty ton , Clear Lake City, Tex.... Donald M en z, McConnell performed in the premiere of Alec member at SUNY (Fredonia), acco mpanied horn player and member of the brass quintet Wilder's chamber opera," T he Truth Ab out Holly Stackhouse in a concert at Vill a Maria ofthe Mohawk Valley Symphony, presented a Windmills," as a featured soloist of the Roch­ College, Erie , Pa. mu sic program with the quintet at Depot Lane ester Oratorio Society at the Eastm an Theatre. Theatre, Schoharie, .Y. .. . Merle Mont­ 1952 gomery ('48GE) wa s director of the National 1945 Patricia Ashley ('64GE), wh ose mu sic review s Black Mu sic Colloquium and Competition, Madeline Bramer In gram has been harpsi­ have appea red in Saturday Review and other sponsored by the John F. Kennedy Center for chordist with the Carmel (C alif.) Bach Festival publicati on s, now is bu sy writing poetry.. .. the Performing Arts and its National Black for several years; she ~t:ache s privately in the Robert Elworthy (G E), professor of mu sic at Commission. Bay area... . W illiamJ. Sc hinst ine ha s retired Indiana University, has resigned as principal after 26 years in the Pottstown (Pa .) public horn of the Minnesota Orchestra; he still 1938 school mu sic program and now runs th e S&S spends summers as principal horn ofthe Santa The Concordia College Choir, under the di­ School of Mu sic and Writing. Fe Opera in ew Mexico. .. . Violinist Barb ara rection of Paul J. Christianse n (GE), com­ Garvey Seagrave J ack son (GE), a member of pleted a 24-day tour of the western United 1946 the Clara Trio of the University of Arkansas States. Doris M . Hardine (GE) has retired as assistant Department ofMu sic, where she is a professor, professor of mu sic at Illinois State University, presented a concert with the trio at Ark ansas 1939 Normal, Ill. State Univer sity. . . . The Stradivari Quartet, The Fortnightly Mu sic Club and the Mac­ featuring violinists W illiam Preu cil (' 56G E), Dowell Music Study Club, Dover, Ohio, hon­ 1947 Allen Ohmes ('60 G E) , and D on Haines ored S ara Riel during National Mu sic Week Sylvia Deutsch er Kushner (G E), principal ('62GE), performed in the fourth concert of for her lifetime dedication to music.... bassoonist with the Lake Charles (La.) Ci vic the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Pulitzer Prize-winning composer-conductor Symphony, wa s featured artist at the sym­ Chamber Music Series at the University of Robert Ward was fea tured with the Kingsport phony's final concert of the se ason . .. . Georgia Chapel, Athens.... R. Cli nto n (Tenn.) Symphony Orchestra at R oss N . " Flowers for Algernon ," a mu sical written by T hayer, J r., choir director, deac on , and mod­ Robinson Auditorium, Kingsport. Charles S tro use and David Rod ger s ope ned in era tor of th e First Baptist Church , ew Lon­ London. Strouse is collaborating with Sammy d on, C onn., dire cted a p erformance o f 1940 Cahn on the score of a mu sical, " Boja ngles!" Haydn's " T he Creation " at the chur ch as part The Grove Cit y (Pa.) College Touring Choir, of its 175th anniversary celebration. under the direction of Prof. O scar A. Cooper 1948 ('4 lG E), gave 11 concerts in nine days in Ohio, Violinist Dorothy Merriam Happel, concert­ 1953 Indiana, and Pennsylvania during its nine­ ma ster of the Greenwich (C onn.) Philhar­ Mu sical director for thi s year's Congre ss of teenth annual spring tour. ... Ulysses Kay monia, was featured soloist at two concerts at Strings at the University o f Cincinnati was (G E) has been inducted into membership of the Greenwich Hi gh Sch ool. Ronald Ondrejka (' 64G E), mu sic director of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. the Fort Wayne (Ind.) Symphon y. . .. Rich ard . . .Alexander Reisman ('4 1G E), ha s been 1950 A. Stepha n (GE), conductor of the Crane named conductor of the Montebello (Calif.) Betty Jean T homas Berk (GE, '63GE), music Symphony at SUNY (Potsdam), ha s had sev­ Symphony. teacher at th e Univer sity of Da yton (Ohio) , er al studio orchestra arra ng ements published served as judge in the Nation al Pian o Guild by Columbia Pictures. 1941 auditions, Middletown, Ohi o. .. . J oseph J en ­ A. Clyde Roller ofAustin, Tex., ha s resigned as kin s ('5IGE), he ad of the the ory and composi­ 1954 professor of mu sic and conductor of the Uni­ tion department of Duquesne U n iv ers ity Arno Drucker (' 55G E), mu sic department versity ofTexas Symphony Orchestra at Au stin School of Mu sic, appeared at Good Shepherd chairm an, Essex Community College, Balti­ to return to a more active career in profes­ Lutheran Church, Monroeville, Pa., as gue st mor e, and staff pianist of the Baltimore Sym­ sional conducting. speaker at a meeting of Symphony East, an ph on y Orchestra, presented a lecture-recital affiliate of the Wom en 's Associ ati on o f the on "T he Pian o Trio in America: From Paine to 1942 Pittsburgh Symphon y Soci ety; his topic was Copland and R. H . Lewi s" at th e Peab od y Mart ha M icci of Rutherford, N.J ., wrote the the development o f th e sympho nic form. .. . Conserva to ry Conce rt Hall. . .. Piani st Daniel music for " RIB," an off-Broadway pla y.... Donald J oh an os ('52G E), assoc iate conductor W. Winter(GE), Oli ve Willi am s Kettering Pro­ Fran k G ra ha m S te wart, president of the of the Pitt sburgh Symphony, ha s been named fessor of Mu sic and chairman of the Depart­ Sou theastern Composers' League, ha s been music director o f the Honolulu Symphony ment ofMu sic at the College ofWooster, Ohio, appointed professor at Mississippi State Uni­ Orchestra and artistic director o f the Hawaii acc ompanied violinist Michal Sobieski in a versity. His composition," Toccata for Piano," Opera Theater. .. . Robert King (GE) con­ recital presented by the Canton Symphon y was commissioned by eil A. Kjo s Mu sic Co. ducted " String In vitati on al," a co nce rt of se­ Or chestra Association in Hart ville , Ohi o. lected string players accompanied by the Sam 1943 Houston State U n ive rsi ty Symphony, in 1955 Flutist Doriot Anthony Dwyer participated in H untsville, Tex., and rec entl y premiered a Helen and Paul (G E) Baumgartner spe nt a the Mannes College of Mu sic (New York City) vio la so nata by Fisher Tull. Kin g performs yea r in Japan where Paul was an exc hang e spring benefit concert at Alice Tull y Hall in with the Sam H oust on University String professor at Kansai G aid ai University and ew York Cit y. . .. Harpist Emily Oppen­ Quartet. . . . Clinton E. Norton h as been Helen tau ght piano at Doshish a Wom en 's heim er, accompanied by flutist John McNeur, named director o f th e new Colle ge of Fine Arts Co llege. They have received a gra nt from th e presented a concert at the Low-Heywood and the Performing Art s Center, now under South D ak ot a Arts Council th rou gh the a­ Thomas School, N.Y. ... Robert Resu e ha s construction at the University of Texas. tion al Endowment for the Arts and will tour retired as teacher and conductor at Lyons (N.Y.) Central School. 35 South Dakota as a piano duo .... Dorothy duc tor of the New York Philharmonic, was the University of Northern Iowa Orchestra at Sarber Calingaert (GE) was piano soloist with guest conductor of the Oakland (Calif.) Sym­ the University. . .. Dr. Donald H. Jackson , J r. the Finger Lakes Symphony Orchestra in a phony in a program of Schumann works . ... was elected a fellow of the American College performance of "Carnival of the Animals" at Sydney Hodkinson ('58G E), chairman of the of Cardiology and has accepted a position as the Canandaigua (N.Y.) Elementary School. conducting and ensembles department of the associate director, Cardiac Laboratories, Bap­ .. . Major Sa muel J. Fricano has retired as Eastman School, also conducts the Perinton tist Memorial Hospital, Memphis. .. . Thomas commander and conductor of the U.S. Army (N.Y.) Concert Band . .. . Con nie Anne Simp­ Stacy, English horn soloist of the New York Field Band, Washington, D.C., and h as son House has been appointed organist and Philharmonic, performed at the Eastman moved , with his wife Marge, to Orlando, Fla. choir director of First Lut heran Church, New­ School as part ofthe Kilbo urn Concert Series. . .. The Eastman Trombone Choir performed ark , N.Y... . J ack J arr ett (GE) attended the . .. The Central Florida Community College the Rochester premiere of Roy J ohn son's University of Florida's opening concert of the (Ocala) Department of Music presented Gary ('57GE) "Canzona for 12 Trombones" at the President's Eighth Annual Festival ofMusic , at Wolf (GE, '64GE), chairman of the Depart­ Eastman School; Johnson is professor of which several of his choral compositions were ment ofMusic at the UniversityofCentraI Flor­ music , Florida State University.... Rosemary performed by the University of Florida Choir. ida , Orlando, in a piano workshop and recital. MacKown ('57GE) gave doctoral piano reci­ .. . Ron and Patricia Hu rst Owens ('58GE) tals at Boston University, the Gardner Mu­ were special guests at a presentation of their 1961 seum (Boston), and Southeastern Massachu­ composition "Alive Again" by the Church Pianist Nao mi Amos ('62GE) gave a recital of setts University, North Dartmouth, Mass. Choir of First Baptist Church, Lubbock, Tex. works by Schubert, Villa-Lobos, and Brahms at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. 1956 1958 . .. Gale Fur man Coffee, flute instructor at For the second year in a row, pianist David Pulitzer Prize-winner Domini ck Arge nto's Whitworth College, Spokane, Wash., is coor­ Burge (GE) has won the Deems Taylor Award (GE) composition " In Praise of Music" re­ dinator of a flute mas ter class workshop with for musical journalism of the American Soci­ ceived its New York premiere at Carnegie Hall Julius Baker; she also plays second flute-pic­ ety ofComposers, Authors, and Publishers for in a Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra pro­ colo in the Spokane Symphony Orchestra... . his regular column in Contemporary Keyboard gram conducted by David Zinman. Argento's Larry Combs, principal clarinetist of the Chi­ magazine; Burge is professor of piano and new work " Miss Havi sham's Fire'lwas given cago Symphony, was graduation speaker at his chairman of the piano department at the its New York premiere by the New York City alma mater, South Charleston (W. Va.) High Eastman School. ... David Fetler (G E), music Opera this season; the cast included Elaine School. ... Paul Dro ste (GE), director of the director of the Rochester Chamber Orchestra, Bonazzi Ca rrington ('51).... Prof. Els a Ohio State University Marc hing Band, spoke was a guest conductor of the Saginaw (Mich.) Ludewig-Verdehr (GE, '64GE) of Michigan at the annual Norwald (Ohio) High School Symphony Orchestra last season. . .. Paul State University has received MSU's Distin­ Music Awards Banquet. ... Lar ry Palm er Freeman ('58GE, '63G E), Detroit Symphony guished Faculty Award.... Bernard Ruben­ (GE, '63GE), professor of harpsichord and Orchestra conductor-in-residence since 1970, stein, conductor and music director of orches­ organ in the Meadows School of the Arts , has been named music director of the Victoria tra and opera at Northwestern University, was Southern Methodist University, Dallas, pre­ Symphony Orchestra in British Columbia, guest conductor for the all-Glenbard orches­ sented a harpsichord recital in Wheeling, Canada.. .. The Noval Trio, featuring pianist tra, chorus, and band at the Glenbard (Ill.) Ohio . . .. Joanna Tousey received a doctor of Barbara Knipper Noval, violinist J anic e Maci­ Music Festival. ... Larry Smith (GE) has musical arts degree in flute performance from sak McRae ('64E), and cellist Lynn Kahle joined the list of international concert organ­ the University of Arizona; she is employed by Richmond, gave a chamber music recital at the ists on the roster of Arts Image Ltd.; he is Roy Seaman Piccolos, Tucson, assembling and Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester. ... The Ars assistant profe ssor of music at Kent State finishing instruments. Nova Quintet, of which clarinetist Noe l Ste­ University in Ohio and serves as organist­ vens ('58GE, '59GE) is a member, was fea­ choirmaster of the Kent United Church of 1962 tured at a recent concert in the Franklin Christ. Joseph Fennimore atten ded the world pre­ College of Arts and Sciences Chamber Music miere ofhis work "Swann in Love" at the third Series; the quintet is a wind ensemble-in-resi­ 1959 Cambiata concert of the season at the Albany dence at the University of South Florida.. .. David Bishop, assistant director for technical (N.Y.) Institute of Art. ... Donald K. Gilbert , Music of composer-pianist Geo rge T. Walker services , University of Chicago Library, has percussion instructor at West Liberty (W. Va.) (GE) was featured at a program titled "The been appointed director of the University of State College, was featured soloist in the Music of Black Americans" at First Congrega­ Georgia Libraries, Athens.. .. John Davison premiere of Willi am J. Schinstine's ('45E) tional United Church of Christ, St. Joseph, (GE) is professor of music at Haverford (Pa .) "Sonata No.4 for Timpani and Percussion Granger, Tex.; the program was dedicated to College.... Pianist Patricia Selover Hanson Ensemble." The performance was part of the the National Federation of Music Clubs' Feb­ ('68GE) and Johnson Nin g, violini st, per­ Day ofPercussion sponsored by the percussion ruary Parade of American Music. formed works of Bach, Tartini, Wieniazwski, department of the division of music, West and Zwilich in Casadesus Recital Hall , SU Y Virginia University. ... Dian e Wehner Gold is 1957 (Binghamton). . .. Pianist Janet Danielson flutist with the Huntington Trio of Pennsyl­ Cellist Barbara Altman, accompanied by the Speaker ('61GE) accompanied soprano Carol vania; she also performed with the New York Middle Georgia Symphony Orchestra, per­ Vaness at a Claremont (Ca lif.) College recital University and Bucknell University cho rales at formed the Dvorak cello concerto in B major recently. Alice Tully Hall, New York. at the orchestra's final season concert at the Grand Opera near Warner Robins, Ga. .. . 1960 1963 The Bloomsburg (Pa.) State College Concert Soprano Sharon Benn ett ('62GE) was guest David Cowley has performed solo cello recitals Choir, directed by William Decker ('60G E), artist of the Welsh National Opera in the role at the National MTNA Convention, Seattle, recently presented a concert for Carbondale of the Queen of the Night in Mozart's "Magic Wash.; at the University of Maryland; at Area Junior-Senior High Schoo l students. ... Flute" and appeared in the same role with the Memphis State University; and at Louisiana Carol yn Webb De Jong received a doctor of Santa Fe Opera. ...Frank M. Carroll (GE), State University. musical arts degree from the University of former Centenary College (Shreveport, La.) Minnesota and is an associate professor of professor, has been named dean ofthe school's 1964 music at the University of Wisconsin, River Gladys F . Hurley School of Music... . Performances of the duo -piano team of Joan Falls.... David Gilbert ('58GE), assistant con- "Triangles," a composition by Sa ndra Flesher Yarbrough and Robert Cowan (GE) included Hal gedahl , oboist of the Oklahoma Sym­ the Poulenc and Bach C major conce rtos with phony, received its premiere performance by 36 Emanuel Vardi and the South Dakota Sym- phony Orchestra, the Poulenc with James pianist-flutist Na n Orthmann S harp (GE, 1971 Yestadt and the Baton Rouge Symphony Or­ '75G E) presented a concert at the Temple The Dickinson College Choir, directed by chestra, and a concert and master class at the Emanu-El, Rochester. Truman Bullard (GE), chairman of the col­ University of Colorado in Boulder. . .. Lili lege's music depa rtmen t, pa rticipated in the Soong Kramer was featured violini st in a 1968 Harrisburg (Pa.) Symph ony Association's final program on "The Jewish Spirit in Music ," part Pian ist Nancy Fanning Bachus (GE) was hon­ concert ofthe season.. .. Seven piano students ofJewish Arts Week sponsored by the Jewis h ored by her former professor, Eugene List, of Siu-Wan Chair ('73GE) of Yor ktown Historical Society of Maryland. who invited severa l ofhis outstandi ng students Heights, N.Y., were prize winners in the 1979 to join him in a concert at Ca rnegie Hall, New New York State Music Teachers Association 1965 York City, honoring the 150th bir thday of audition. .. . Pian ist Karen Iannotti George Joyce Ca t alfano, faculty member of the Louis Moreau Gottschalk and the 126th anni­ performed in a piano concert sponsore d by Woodwind Quintet Baroque Ensemble and versary of Steinway and Sons. . .. Glenn Carnegie Hall Inc., com me morati ng the 150th the West Virginia Symphonette, has been Block , director of orchestras and opera at the anniversary of the bir th of composer and appointed assistant profe ssor of flute at West Conservatory of Music of the University of pianist Loui s Go ttscha lk. She was also guest Virginia University, Morgantown. ... Pianist Missouri, Kansas City, co nducted Verdi's musical artist for the grand opening of the Brian Dykstra (GE, '69GE), Wooster (Ohio) " Othello" with soprano Phyllis Curtin and New York executive offices and workshops of College faculty member, presented the pro ­ bari tone Roy Samuelson. .. . Harry R. Faulk Henson Associates ("The Muppet Show")... . gram " Ragtime Renaissance" at the Wilder­ ('7 1G E), associa te professor of music at Fair ­ Organi st Antone Godding (G£), associa te pro­ ness Center near Wilmot, Ohio. ... Fedor mont (W. Va.) State College, received a doctor fessor of organ and University organist at Kabalin (GE), teacher at Man hattan School of of arts degree in music from Ca rnegie-Mellon Oklahom a City Unive rsity, was feature d in a Music and the New School for the Ar ts, University. He was chosen to direct the Bar­ recital spo nsore d by the Waterbury (Conn.) recentl y conducted the Lubo Opera Company bour County (W. Va.) Musical Festival. .. . chapter of the American G uild of Organists. of Madison, .J., in a performance of Cilea's The first win ner of the Kennedy Cen ter- Rock­ ... Jazz saxophonist Rick Lawn, director of "Adriana Lecouvreur" at Fairleigh Dickinson efeller Foundation Internation al Competition, jazz studies, University of No rthern Iowa, University.. .. Dani el St ern, music director pianist Bradford Gowen ('69GE), made his Cedar Falls, appeared in concert with Fort and conductor of the Boise (Idaho) Philhar­ New York debut at Alice Tully Hall and also Hays Kansas State University jazz musicians monic , was guest conductor for "Family Con­ gave a homecoming performance in Kilbo urn and performed at "An Evening of Jazz" pro­ cert with the Brockport Symphony" at SUNY Hall of the Eastman Schoo l. .. . Karen Hag­ gra m at West High Schoo l, Waterloo, Iowa. . .. (Brockport)... . Piani st Mescal Wilson made berg (GE, '76G£), formerly head of cata log­ The Department of Music, Willi am Woods his New York debut at Carnegie Recital Hall ing, Sibley Music Library, Eastma n Schoo l, is Co llege, Fu lton, Mo ., p resen te d pi anist and was piano soloist at a benefit for the Dallas editor of the New Women's Times. . . . Pianist Deborah Richards in concert recentl y.. .. Lee Symphony. David Hollander accompanied violinist Mar­ Rothfarb has completed an M.M. degree in jorie Mendel in her New York deb ut at Car­ theory at Hartt Co llege of Music and was 1966 negie Recital Ha ll. .. .The Memphis State awarded a full-tuition fellowship for a Ph.D . Barbara Corbin Altman ('69GE) performed University Chorale, directed by Robert Swift program at Yale Universi ty. the Dvor ak concerto for solo cello and orches­ (GE,'70G E), was selected to perform at the tra with her husband, lan, pianist, at the Grand Democratic National Midterm Convention 1972 Opera House in Macon, Ga .. .. With Presi­ and in the CBS radio series "Cavalcade of Joseph N. Fried has received a master of dent Carter in attendance, Elizabeth Buccheri Christmas Music." bu siness adm inistration degree from Case Western Reserve University's School of Man­ (GE) accompanied the Chicago Symphony 1969 Chorus at a White House press correspond­ agement, Cleveland, Ohi o. . . . Vibraphonist Jerry Paul Brainard ('70GE), playing a do u­ ents' dinner in Washington, D.C. . . . Robert Ted Piltzecker was the feat ured performer at ble-manual harpsichord, appeared with the Culver (GE) was this season's conductor ofthe the Affiliate Art ists Na tional Confe rence at Map lewood Festival Orchestra in Plattsburgh, Ann Arbor Summer Symphony; he is a string Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, N.Y. He N.Y ... . Cellist Dorothy Hall Lewis (GE) instrument specialist and conductor in the received a composition awa rd from ASCAP appeared in concert with pia nist Cary Lewis in and recently completed an eight-week resi­ University of Michigan Schoo l of Music.... the Pan Texas American University Fine Arts Brian J. Ellard ('68GE, '73GE) has been de ncy in Wenatchee, Wash., sponsored by the Auditorium, Edinburg, Tex., as par t of a appointed vice dean of liberal arts at the Alcoa Foundation. ... Pamela Poulin, faculty visiting artist series. .. . Ronald Vermillion University of Moncton, New Bru nswick, Can­ member, SUNY (Co rtland), present ed a clari­ ('72GE) is director of music ministries, Bel­ ada .... Born : to Steven Andrew (GE, '78GE) net recital at the Dowd Fine Arts Center mont United Met hodis t Church , Nas hville, and Theresa Vincent Smith, a son , Steve n Theatre and also appea red with pian ist Donna Tenn . Andrew, on Nov. 12, 1978. A nderson in a co ncert at th e Tompkins­ 1970 Cortland Commu nity Co llege.... Mary Elaine King Vermillion (G E) is chapel organist 1967 Coloratura soprano Charlene Campbell was at Scarritt College, Nas hville, Tenn.. .. Mark A program of American vocal music was soloist in a pop s concert by the Johnson City, Westcott (GE), pia nist, made his debut as a presented by soprano Sheila Allen (GE) and Tenn. , Symphony Orchestra. .. . Gary Dea vel so loist with t he Baltim ore Sy mphony piani st David Yeomans at the Buffalo and Erie (GE), professor of music at Manchester (Ind.) County Library auditorium in Buffalo. . .. College, presented a lecture-performan ce on Orc hestra . Clarinetist Frank Kowalsky, faculty member at music and poetry as part ofthe World of Poetry 1973 Interlochen Arts Academy, was guest soloist of Series of the Indiana Committee for the Hu­ Kenneth Grant is principa l clarin etist of the the Central Michigan Orchestra at a concert man ities.. .. The Eastman Schoo l Sym phony Columbus (Ohio) Sympho ny.... Pian ist Fred in Mount Pleasant, Mich . .. .Audrey Hardy Orchestra, under the direction ofDavid Effron Griesinger(GE), teacher at Westmont College, Lamprey, faculty member, Saturday Conser­ ('72GE), has been awarded the 1979 ASCAP Santa Barbara, Calif., was guest soloist in the vatory of California State University at Do­ Award for "adventuresome programming production "From the Palms to the Lilies" at minquez Hills, has been appointed first horn in of contemporary music." .. . Paul Martin Williams Valley (Pa.) Senio r High School. . .. the Car son (Calif.) Symphony and Baroque Palombo (GE), director of the School of Edward Moore, tympanist with the Brazilian Con sortium, South Bay, Calif. ... In conjunc­ Music at University of Washington, Seattle, Symp hony Orchestra, Rio de Janeiro, has tion with an artists-in- school s program, Fred coordinated that university's participation in completed a new album on the EMI-Odeon Sahlmann (GE) of McNeese State University the 21st AFM Congress of Strings . ... Chri s label in .Rio de Janeiro with the Victor Brasil gave a piano recital at Bunkie (La.) High Vadala, woodwind player in the Ch uck Ma n­ Jazz Quintet. . .. Mary Lentz Nero is playing School. ... Baritone William ('76GE) and gione Quartet, has been appointed clinicia n, second horn in the San Antonio Symphony. Selmer Saxophone. 37 1974 pel Singers, and the Rochester Institute of Noll has acce pted the position of head nurse, Philip Markowitz recently returned fro m two Technology G osp el Choir. ... Marriages: newborn and prem ature nursery, Lancaster Euro pean tours. His composition " Sno Peas" Maria D'Alesio to David eale on J uly 7 in (Pa.) G eneral Hospital. ... Wh ile a student at was record ed on Warner Broth ers, and he Pennington , .J. . .. Michael Maisel ('77 GE) the Aca de my of Health Sciences, Fort Sam recorded two albums in Paris with Chet Baker. to Lynn Pitcher in Rhi neb eck, N.Y... .Born : Hou ston , Tex., William J. Robenolt was pro ­ . . . Singer-composer Margaret McGlinn has to Alvin and Debra Parris, a son, Benj am in moted to captain, U.S. Army. given solo appearan ces weekly at Inn s of the Jam es, on Feb. 25, 1978. Court in Wh ite Plain s, N.Y. She and her band 1978 have been playing in Westche ster and she is 1977 Guy L. Higgins has been prom oted to first writing the scores for two films and a musical, Violini st Sandra Goldberg (G E), winn er of the lieut enant , U.S. Ar my; he is working in the " Distant Relati ons." .. . Ce llist Carlene Stober Kin gsport (Tenn.) Symph ony Orch estra Co n­ acute intern al med icine un it at Brooke Army (' 76G E) parti cip ated in a faculty recital at cert o Co mpetition, was featured soloist at the Medical Ce nter, San Antonio, Tex.... Ma r­ Cent en ary College, Shre veport , La. She hold s sympho ny'S last concert of the seaso n.. .. riages : Nancy Barry to Erick G. Bond ('77 RC) a joi nt position with Centenary Co llege and Sop ran o Lucy Millar (G E) present ed a conce rt on May 5 in Webster, .Y. .. . Nancy Jean th e Shrevep ort Symphon y Orchestra.... at the Art Complex Museum near Du xbury, Johnson to Michael Arthur Gaul ('76RC) on Lakeland Community College's seventh an­ Mass.. .. Pianist Fredrica Prior Phillips May 26. nu aljazz festival featured trumpeter AI Vizzuti ('7 8G E) was awa rde d the $500 first prize in the ('76G E), artist-clinician for Kin g Music In­ Willi am C. Byrd Young Artist Co mpetition stru ments, Eastlake, Ohio. held in Flint, Mich. She appe ared as guest soloist with the Flint Symphon y Orchestra.. . . University College 1975 As one of three winn ers of the Eastma n School of Mu sic's Annual Co ncerto Competitio n, 1968 Th e 26th annual Organ-Choral Lectureship, Stephen Rush has been pro mo ted to ma nager, spo nso red by Leb an on Valley (Pa.) College, pian ist Brian M. Preston perform ed with the Eastma n Ph ilh armonia in th e Eastman man agement consu lting, at the San Francisco featured Timothy Albrecht (GE, '78GE) as office of Arthur Young & Co . clinician.... Violini st Jeffrey Cox (' 77GE) Th eatr e. .. . Clement Reid wro te the mu sical score for the film "The 480 Expe rience," whic h pre sented his first faculty recital at Cen tral 1970 Washin gton University's Hertz Recital Hall ; was recentl y show n at the 1979 Los Ange les Int ern ational Film Exposit ion . . .. Hollis Ann Kenneth Medzie has joi ned the faculty of the Cox teaches music theory and violin at CW U. College of Business Administrat ion at the ... Raymond Pancarowicz, prin cipal second Selvaggi was award ed the only 1979- 80 Ful­ bright scholarship in voice by the G erm an Uni versity of Brid geport (Co nn.) as assistant violin in the Virginia Philh arm oni c and the professor of law.. .. Bobby J. McDonald has Vir gini a Opera Associati on , recently per­ Fulbright Co mmission. She rece ntly received a master's de gree in performan ce and litera­ received a master's degree in science (educa­ formed in the Am erican premiere of Thea tion) fro m Niagara (NY) University. Musgrave's opera " Ma ry, Qu een of Scots" in tur e fro m Eastma n School. . ..Tru mpeter Jerry an d violinist Joanna Ryan Shelton (GE) Norfolk, Va. .. . Sharon Schultz (G E) sang the 1976 mezzo role of the Baronessa in Rossini's " La were guest artists in a concert fea turing twen­ tieth-century mu sic at Drury Co llege, Spring­ Born : to David and Jessica Vanschenkhof Pietr a del Paragone" in perform ances by the Price, a son , Jordan Hayward , on March 13. Bel Cant o Opera in New York last wint er. ... field , Mo. . . . Jon Wright (GE) presented an organ concert at Swarthmore (Pa.) Co llege. Th e Grand Art e Trio, of which piani st Arlene 1979 Shrut ('77GE) is a member, gave a con cert An art icle, " Voluntary Co mpliance: Prescrip­ sponso red by the San G abriel (Calif.) Valley 1978 Keven Hanlon (G E), a University of Texas tion for Failure ," by Ted Burraco, was pu b­ Philh arm onic Arti sts Association . Shrut also lished in Equal Opportunity Forum; Barraco is accompanied soprano Peggy Sears Keller at a doctoral stude nt in music composi tion, was one of three person s who tied for the Joseph A. a tte nding Syracuse (N. Y.) University Law concert at Loyola Marymount University, Los School. Angeles.. .. Marimbist Leigh Howard Stevens Beams Prize given by Co lumbia Univers ity for made his ew York City debut at Town Hall his wor k "Four Orient al Songs for Unaccom­ after completing a six-week tour of college pani ed Mixed Cho rus ." ... George Vosburgh campuses, including stops in Puert o Rico. .. . has join ed the Chicago Symphon y Orch estra In Memoriam Organi st Terry Yount (G E) pre sented a recital as seco nd trumpet. at the University of Evan sville (11 1.). He is Alvalyn Eunice Woodward 'OS, , II G on March assistant professor of music, Kentucky Wes­ 23 in Cha rlotte, N.C. leyan College, Owensboro , Ky... .Born : to Lois Merrell Dinse' li on April 4 in Roch ester. Martha and Raymond Pancarowicz, a son, School of Nursing Alice Booth Holmes ' 13 on March 3 1 in David, on Dec . 6, 1978. Rochester. 1958 G. Cyrus Bishop ' 14 on March 16 in Portland, 1976 Geraldine J . Hudak, SN, has been assigned Ore. Bass player Steve Alcott is a member of the to the Nation al Naval Medical Ce nter, Be­ C. Frederick Wolters, Jr. ' IS on Ju ne 12 in jazz gro up Salt City Six, which performed at thesda, Md. , as dir ector-edu cation al coo rdina­ Roch ester. the Mem orial Art G alle ry's " Nig ht in New tor, Nurse Co rps anes thesia program. Emily Cutler Kruger ' 16 o n Jun e 6 in Orleans and All Th at Jazz" program in Roch ester. Rochester " Legends of Birth ," a composi- 1975 Daniel L. Hint ' 17, '20G in Boliver, N.Y. tion by Roger Briggs (G E, '78GE), assistant Marriages: Cheryl Peck to Sanford G erb er on Clara Ludwig Wagner ' 17 o n M a y I in professor of mu sic at St. Mary's Colle ge, Notr e Aug. 5, 1978, in New Jersey. Ch atham , N.J. Dam e, Ind ., received its premi ere perform ­ William E. Brown ' 18 on May 22 in Roch ester. ance at the Ca thedral Church of St. John the 1976 Frederick Fortmiller '20 on Feb. 13 in Newark, Divine in New Yor k City.. .. Debra and Alvin Myra Gomberg has received an M.S. degree in N .Y. Parris III, are busy with their music schoo l, nursing from the University of Pennsylvani a Burton J. Hayes '21 on Jan. 22 in Williams­ Parris Music Instru ction , in Rochester ; Alvin is and has been appo inted clinical spec ialist in burg, Va. also d ir ector-musici an o f th e U RG osp el pediatr ic pulmon ary disease, Children's Heart Frances A. Smith Rogers '24 on March 8 in Ch oir, the Monroe Community College Gos- Ho spit al, Philadelphia, Pa.. .. Kathryn Kuehn New York , N.Y.

38 Ruth Northup Tibbs '22E on June 6 in San D. H. Merrills '52GE on May 21in Greenville, over the years served as instructor, assistant Diego , Ca lif. S.c. professor, and associate professor ofradiology. Irma Briggs Rossdeut scher '25 on March 28 in James E. Ging '54 on May 26 in Ballston Lake , He was appointed professor of radiology in Batavia, N.Y. N.Y. 1961. Donald R. Clark '28 on June 13 in Rochester. Keven W. Murphy '55U on May 31 in Bend , "The Department of Radiology was very Marguerite Olney '28E on Dec . 13 in Spring­ Ore. fortunate to have the long and devoted service field, Vt. Arthur S. Bennett '58U on June 8 in Ca le­ of Dr. Rogoff," said Dr. Harry W. Fischer, MarieA. Ball '29, '32G on May 24 in Penn Yan, don ia, N. Y. chairman of the Departm ent. N.Y. Walter M. Lorensen '58U , '67G on Ma rch 23 " In since re appreciation of Dr. Rogoff's Evelyn Greene Knut son '30E on Feb . 23 in in Venice, Fla. efforts, his friends and members of the De­ Midland, Mich. Esther L. Cooke '59GE in Decatur, G a. partment have established the Rogoff Visiting Dr. Paul M. Levin '30GM in Dallas, Tex. Roland A. Hirsch '60 on January 5. Profes sorship in Radiology," Dr. Fischer said. Miroslav Sichinsky '30 on March 16 in West­ Anne Yeis ley S t reet '60 o n April 9 in Contributions to the Rogoff Professorship may land , Mich. Rochester. be made through the Development Office, Box Donald H . Anderson '3 1 o n June 25 in Patricia Smith Cooper '6 1,'67G on Apri l 16 in 643, Universi ty Med ical Cen ter, Rochester, Rochester. Turin , N.Y. N .Y. 14642. John E. Deming '31 on Feb. 20 in Elizabeth­ Dr. Daniel P. Kulick '65 on Sept. 23, 1978, in town, .Y. Bronxville, N.Y. C. Frederick Wolters, Jr. '15, died June 12 in William J. Glaser '31E on May 14in Brighton, Marguerite Peluso Agnello '67G on May 18 in Rochester at the age of 86. N.Y. Rochester. A 1915graduate ofthe Colle ge of Engineer­ Herbert Heesch '32 in Troy, N.Y. Gail Zwerdlin g Gold '67 on Apri l 26, 1978, in ing and Applied Science, Wolters was active in Dr. Archibald C. Hewes '32M R in Jul y 1978 in London, England. University affairs until his death. He was a Gulfport, Miss. John M. Beardsley '68G on May 24 in Hon­ member of the Associates and the Presidents John H. Lowell '32G E, '42GE in Tucson , Ariz. eoye Falls, N.Y. Society and was active in the alumni chapter of Dr. Carlton P. Lewis '34 in Massena, N.Y. Eg ils R. Rozenbergs '76 on June 3 in Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. Florence Metz Wuerges '34 on April 5 in Rochester. Wolters was a member of the Board of Rochester. Anna M o nika Dandan ell '78 in Ave sta, Governors of the Alumni Federation from Marion Jones Dick '36 on April 13 in Bir­ Sweden. 1957 to 1958 and from 1958 to 1961. He served ming ham , Mich . Debra L. Ger showitz '78 in Yonkers , N.Y. on the Publi c Relations and Alumni Scho lar­ Joseph R. Ligozio '36 on May 26 in Rochester. ship Committees and was an alumni admis­ Reuben Bitensky '37 on May 15 in Syracuse, sion s represent ative in Philadelphia for over 20 .Y. Obituaries years. Wolter s was respon sible for brin ging I. James Motta '37 on Feb. 10 in Oakland, many students to the University as a result of Calif. Katharine Warin g Whippl e, widow of the late his alumni work and as a representative of the Harwood R. Ellis '38 on June 24 in Penfield, Dr. George Hoyt Whipple, Nobel laureate and International Friendship Council. He and his N.Y. foun ding dea n of the Schoo l of Medicine and fami ly served as hosts I or foreign students F. Theodore Deci '39G on June 14 in Palmyra, Dentistry, died in Rochester on May 6. She was whi le they attended the University. .Y. 91. He was married to the late Jessie Wood ams Evelyn Sick Scott '39N in April in Weston , Dr. and Mrs. Whipple were major benefac­ Barry Wolter s, a member of the class of 1918. Conn. tors of the Medical Center. The y were lifetime His daughter, Susan V. Gittler, was also a John A. Snell, Jr. '39 on March 27 in Hope­ members of the Presidents Society and the Rochester graduate. well, Va. Associa tes and were hon orary life members of Dr. Sidney B. Finn '40GM on Jun e 6 in the Friends of the University Libraries. Alvalyn Eunice Woodward '05, ' I IG , the sec­ Birmingham, Ala. Mrs. Whipple was a longtime supporter of ond woman graduate of the University to go Marcella euman Kiger '40 on Jan. 14 in Laurinburg Institute, a private technical-train­ on to receive a Ph.D., died Friday, March 23, in Hicko ry, .c. ing school in Laurinburg, S.c. She was active Charlotte, N.C. She was 94. Robert C. Weiskopf '4 1E on May 6 in Beach­ in plans for the restoration ofCharleston , S.c., Dr. Woodward received a master's degree in wood , Ohio. and in effor ts to refurbish Whipple House, her biology from Rochester in 1911, then earned a Dr. Stanley M. Rogoff '46M on May 2 in husba nd's birth place in Ashland , N .H., which Ph.D . in physio logy from the University of Rochester. was donated to the commun ity. As a member Michigan in 1918. Raymond E. Jeffery '47 on March 22 in Oak­ of the Women's Educational and Industrial From 1915 to 1927, she served at different land , .1. Union, she helped raise fund s for nursing time s on the faculties of Vassar College, Sim­ Dr. Ruth Rogers '48GM on March 14 in scholarships. mon s College, Amherst College, North Caro­ Dayton a Beach, Fla. Mrs. Whipple attended Goucher College, in lina College for Women (Greensboro), and the Gordon A. R. Graham '49G on May 9 in Maryland , and taught singing. She was active University of Maine. McLea n, Va. in a number ofcommunity projects in Roches­ In 1927, she joined the faculty at the Uni­ Rev. Phillip B. Griffith s '49G in Passaic, N.J. ter and elsewhere. versity of Michigan , where she taught for the Dr. Harold F. Knight, Jr. '49GM on March 6 in next 28 years. She was an assistant professor of Bloomfield, Conn. Dr. Stanley M. Rogoff '46M, professor of zoology at the time of her retirement in 1954. Dr. William B. Woods '50MR on April 11in La radiology and chief of diagnostic radiology at Dr. Woodward attended her fiftieth reunion Mesa, Calif. the University Medical Center, died in Roch­ at Roche ster in 1955. She was one year away Xenia Anton Desby '51G E on Aug. 13, 1978, in ester on May 2, after a long illne ss. He was 57. from her 75th reunion at the time ofher death. Hollywood , Calif. Born in Auburn, N.Y., he was a sum ma cum She pub lished numerous academic and sci­ William J. La wler ' 5 1U on March 9 in laude grad uate of the College of the City of en tific articles and was a member of many Roche ster. New York and received the M.D . degree from professional and honorary organizations, in­ Sister Ma rie Paulus Newton '51G on March 4 the Universit y'S School of Medicine and cluding Phi Beta Kappa, the American Associ­ in Rochester. Dentistry. ation for the Advancement of Scienc e, the W ill iam C. Grob en '52 o n March l O in He came to Strong Memorial Hospital in American Society o f Zoologists, and the Rochester. 1948 as a resident and fellow in radiology and Michigan Academy of Science .

39 R view Point

Willard F. Leusch '36 has contributed to the University's Rochester-area phonathons eight time s a year for the past 10 years. But before you dial his number to sell him aluminum siding or real estate in Florida, let us add that his "contributions" have been as a participant. As a volunteer worker, he's the caller, not the callee. And his charm and sense of humor have become familiar to other volunteers and to the 1,800 alumni he's telephoned over the years. Leusch began working on University phonathons in the 1960's on Long Island, where he taught German in high school. "We used to go into the New York Telephone building in Manhattan," he remembers. "Before each session began we'd have stale fried cakes and coffee that could have tasted better. Now, in Rochester, we have an elegant buffet." Leusch retired in the early 1970's and moved to Rochester, and that's when he became the cornerstone of the phonathon volunteer corps. "We usually run four phonathons in the fall and four to six in the spring in Rochester," says Jim Klimschot '78, development assistant at the University. "We try to have 30 different volunteers at each session. Will attends them all, so we constantly have to change the menu." Leusch takes the gibe and comes right back: "I like the free meal ," he says. "When you're on a fixed income, you have to cut costs." But it isn't just the buffet that Leusch enjoys . "Phonathons aren 't a chore," he says. "They are kind offun. I always like to see how many oldsters will show up. I'm vintage material." Once the telephoning starts, however, Leusch show s that he's of special vintage. "He's amazing," says Klimschot. "He remembers everything. He'll call someone he hasn't talked to in a year or so and ask how the grandchildren are doing, or he'll mention a pet cat by name." 1979-80 Phonathon Schedule Leusch remembers one conversation with a 91-year-old City Date woman. "Through our chatting I soon discovered that I had been her pupil in junior high school," he says. "I didn't mention it to Buffalo Oct. 9, 10 her, though. She certainly can't be expected to remember all of Atlanta Oct. 9, 10 her students, and I didn't want to embarrass her." Miami Oct. II He also recalls a number ofconversations with one particular Rochester. Oct. 15, 16, 17, 18 alumnus. "He's very well-read," says Leusch, "but when he gets Boston Nov. 12, 13 your ear,you're good for a halfhour. You have to hear him chastise Philadelphia Nov. 12, 13 the federal government, the economy, this policy, and that policy. Syracuse...... Nov. 12, 13 You can 't get a word in edgewise. But he always comes up with a Alb any Nov. 14 gift, so you have to let him talk." Washington, D.C. Nov. 14, 15 In addition to Rochester, phonathons are held in 24 other cities Cleveland Feb. II , 12 acro ss the country (see schedule at right). One-third of the San Francisco Feb. II , 12 University's annual gifts are received via telephone pledges. In Seattle Feb. 11 ,12 1978-79,4,144 donors pledged $120,224. Detroit Feb. 13 The largest contribution Leusch received was $500, and it came Los Angeles Feb. 13, 14 as a surprise. "When I shuffle through my cards at the end of an Chicago March 18, 19 evening, I usuall y don't have any $500 pledges or anything near Dallas March 24 that amount. But I can't be discouraged when I realize how man y Houston March 25 volunteers there are and the number ofphonathons. That's when Phoenix March 26, 27 I realize that each individual's effort is worthwhile." New york April 14, 15, 16, 17 Long Island April 16, 17 Rochester. May 19,20,21,22

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