EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD

Frank M . Child ill D irk Kuyk Proftssor of Biology Proftssor of E"glisl•

Gerald]. H ansen, J r. '51 T heodore T. Tansi '54 Direttor of Alum"i & Vol. 20, N o . 1 (ISSN 01643983) Winter 1990 Coll~gt Relatious Susan E. Weisselberg '76 Editor: William L. C hurchill J . Ronald Spencer '64 Assoriatt Academic Dea" Associate Editor: Roberta Jenckes M '87 Sports Editor: Gabriel P. Harris '87 NATIONAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Staff Writers: Martha A . Davidson, E xecutive Committee Elizabeth A . Natale Publications Assistant: Kathleen H . Davidson President David A. Raymond '63 South Windsor, CT Photographer: jon Lester Vice Presidents Alumni Fund Scott W. Reynolds '63 ARTICLES Upper Montclair. NJ ANOTHER EISENHOWER 4 Admissions Jane W. Melvin Mattoon '84 COMES TO TRINITY Hartford, CT By R oberta j enckes Area Associations Michael B. Masius '63 Hartford, CT Writer David Eisenhower visits the Col­ lege, advising students on writing and Nominating Committee Karen A. Jeffers '76 talking about his famous granddad, " Ike." Westport, CT THE SIXTIES 13 Mtmbm By]. Ronald Spencer '64 Robert E. Brickley '67 Dorothy McAdoo MacColl '74 Trinity's Associate Academic Dean offered West Hartford, CT Haverford, PA thoughtful perspective on the momentous Thomas D. Casey '80 Eugene M. Russell '80 '60s 'to his classmates at Reunion, 1989. Washington, D.C. Boston, MA Nancy L. Katz '84 Jeffrey H. Seibert '79 TEARINGDOWN THEWALL 16 New York, N Y Baltimore, MD By E liz abeth A. N atale Robert E. Kehoe '69 Stanley A. Twardy, Jr. '73 Chicago, IL Stamford, CT Three Trinity professors offer scholarl y Daniel L. Korengold '73 Pamela W. Von Seldcneck '85 and personal perspectives on the dram atic Washington, D.C. Philadelphia, PA changes ~akin g pl ace in Europe. Scott Goldsmith '90 Alden R. Gordon '69 T WO DOCT O RS' 24 Senior Class President Faculty Representative CO M PASSIO NATE MINISTRIES Atlrlttic Advisory Commillu In Afg hanistan and in the Amish country, Donald). Viering '42 Denise Janes-Sciarra '80 two Trinity alumni struggle against great odds. Simsbury, CT Wethersfield, CT George P. Lynch, Jr. '61 West Hartford, CT C O V ER: Trinity f ootball players celebrate Alumni Tmsrees during th e season-ending Wesleyan game. The Carolyn A. Pelzel '74 Michael Zoob '58 Bantams finished their tenth straight winning Hampstead, N H Boston, MA season in 1989. For more sports, see page 32 . Arlene A. Forastlere '71 JoAnne A. Epps '73 Ann Arbor, Ml Marlton, NJ George E. Andrews II '66 Thomas R. DiBenedetto '71 DEPARTMENTS Newport, Rl Nahant, MA 1 Along the Walk ominating Commiuu Books 22 Karen Jeffers '76, Chair Robert N . Hunter '52 Westport, CT Glastonbury, CT Letters 23 Robert E. Brickley '67 Wenda Harris Millard '76 West Hartford, CT New York, NY Sports 32 Karen Mapp ross '77 Stanley A. Twardy, Jr. '73 Class Notes 38 New Haven, CT Stamford, CT In Memory 54 Board of Fellow s Published by the Office of Public Relations, Trinity College, Hartford, 06106. Issued four Bernard F. Wilbur, J r. 'SO Glen A. Woods '75 times a year: Fall, Winter, Spring and Summer. Second West Hartford, CT Meriden, CT class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut and addi­ Susan Martin Haberlandr '71 Edward H. Yeterian '70 tional mailing offices. West Harrford, CT Wa terville, ME The Trinity Reporter is mailed to alumni, parents, fac­ Donald K. Jackson '83 Susan E. Weisselberg '76 ulty, staff and friends of Trinity College without Hartford, CT New Haven, CT charge. All publication rights reserved and contents may be reproduced or reprinted only by written per­ Vietor F. Keen '63 Stephen P. Jones '63 mission of the Editor. Opinions expressed are those of New York, NY Hartfo rd, CT the editors or contributors and do not refl ect the official Al ice M. Simon '83 Charles H. McGill '63 position ofTrinity College. Hartfo rd, CT Minneapolis, MN Postmaster: Send address change to Trinity Reporter, Andrew H. Walsh '79 William H. Schweitzer '66 Trinity College, Hartford, CT 061 06. Hartford, CT Alexandria, VA ALONG THE WALK TRINITY COLLEGE

Muhammad of the Nation of Islam. While determined to uphold the principle of free speech on the Trin­ ity campus, Gerety said, he also was committed to ensuring the safety of students and staff and the speaker himself. For that evening's lecture, he made contingency emer­ gency plans with the Hartford po­ lice deJ)artment, added guards from their ranks to Trinity's security per­ sonnel, and closed the event to the public and media, to avoid any con­ frontation between the speaker and individuals from outside of the campus community and to allow seats in the lecture room for stu­ dents who wished to attend. The lecture was attended by a capacity audience of 550. Many were turned away. Later in the week a unity rally was held on campus by stu­ dent groups eager to unite follow­ 1 ing this difficult period, and more - campus meetings were planned. Reactions to the mahy issues raised in the events were wide­ ranging, on- and off-campus. Writ­ ing in The Hartford Courant, colum­ nist Tom Condon summarized some of the outcomes of the con­ troversy: " It's a shame the public TRINITY P ARENTS and their sons and daughters basked in warm, sunny was banned, and I hope that can be October weather during Parents Weekend. Many watched men's and avoided in the future. But a lot of women's athletic competitions (above), and attended classes. good ~hings happened. Hundreds attended the second speech, and many are still arguing about it. Ger­ Lively Issues Debate addition, there were charges that ety exposed students to a position Closes Fall Semester anti-Semitic remarks were made at and let them make up their own that event. minds. In other words, he got them President Gerety asked the Col­ to think ... " lege's Racial Harassment Grievance In the closing weeks of the fall se­ Committee to investigate such mester, the campus was astir with charges and called for a campus­ Leadership Conference debate, centered around lectures at wide meeting to discuss bigotry as Has Record Turnout

Trinity by representatives of the a threat to the Trinity community. llllllllllllllllllllli llllllllllll i • ...... N ation of Islam. The controversy He condemned anti-Semitism, say­ began with allegations by some stu­ ing it was a form of racism. A spe­ Despite near torrential rain, Trin­ dents and faculty of intimidation cial faculty meeting was also called. ity's fourth annual Alumni Leader­ and frisking by security guards of Following those discussions, Gerety ship Conference, held October 20- Minister Don Muhammad of the and the College administration 21, 1989, set records in attendance black separatist N ation of Islam re­ planned special security measures with over 100 class agents, area asso­ ligion at a November 21 lecture. In for a December 6 talk by Conrad ciation officers and reunion chair- ALONG THE WALK

The Boston Area Club was the re­ cipient of the George C. Capen Tro­ phy for most effectively fulfilling the functions of an area association club. President Gerety, David A. Ray­ mond and Scott W. Reynolds '63, Chairman of the Alumni Fund hosted the ceremonies which were followed by a performance by the Trinity Pipes.

Interdisciplinary Minors Play Major Role With Faculty, Students ...... Mozart's music will be getting extended play on campus this semes­ ter. The Middle Ages, the biome­ chanics of human movement, and Don Quixote will be the objects of fresh inquiry. Introducing these, and other new courses, into the curricu­ lum is the interdisciplinary minor, the 2 integrated six-course program of study which is one of the new non­ - major academic requirements ap­ AT Alumni Leadership Conference, the Class of '64 won two fund-raising proved by the faculty as part of a awards. From left: P resident Tom Gerety and Kenneth R . Auerbach '64. comprehensive revision of the Col­ lege's general education curriculum. men traveling from as far away as Awards Dinner held Friday eve­ Required of all undergraduates ex­ Seattle, San Francisco and Virginia. ning, the Class of 1939 and the Class cept those completing a regular inter­ Sponsored jointly by the Alumni of 1964 were honored with two disciplinary major, the minor and Development Offices, the Con­ awards each. The Class of 1939 integrates knowledge from at least ference is designed to orient and as­ received the National Alumni Asso­ three academic fields, enabling stu­ sist Trinity's alumni volunteers. ciation A ward for increased partici­ dents to learn to relate different disci­ In addition to numerous work­ pation and a second award for plines and bodies of knowledge to shops, the volunteers met President participation by a class out 50 years one another. To date, 23 minors have Tom Gerety in a question-and­ or less. The Class of 1926 won the been approved. answer session, and heard a faculty other participation award for a class Sophomores, the first class to take panel entitled "New Curricular Ini­ that has been out more than 50 an interdisciplinary minor, were en­ tiatives: Toward the 21st Century," years. The Class of 1964 won couraged to declare their minor this and a student panel focused on "The awards for the most dollars raised fall term. As of mid-November, 44 of Trinity Experience." and for increased dollars raised. 489 in the Class had formally done so. The participants also heard re­ The Bernard S. Dignam A ward Another 25 have expressed interest, ports from Laurence S. Duffy, di­ was won by the Class of 1943 for but not declared, a minor in Legal rector of development, Gerald J . the best record of a non-reunion Studies, according to the coordinator Hansen, Jr., director of alumni & class. The 1934 Alumni Fund Tro­ of that minor, Andrew Gold of eco­ college relations, David A. Borus phy was captured by the Class of nomics and public policy studies. '68, dean of admissions & fmancial 1969 for the best record in the Associate Academic Dean J. Ron­ aid, Andrew H. Walsh '79, presi­ Alumni Fund, while the Classes of ald Spencer says that some 15 to 20 dent of the Board of Fellows, and 1979 and 1988 shared the 1916 new courses have been developed for David A. Raymond '63, president Alumni Fund Trophy for best rec­ minors, although primarily the inter­ of the National Alumni Association. ord by a class which has been out disciplinary minors are based on At the Alumni Leadership ten years or less. existing courses. Courses in ALONG THE WALK

Women's Studies were being planned Michael Allen '92 declared a mi­ I'm most interested in." even before the interdisciplinary mi­ nor in Formal Organizations be­ Matthieu Pierre '92 declared a mi- . nor requirement was adopted. At cause, among other reasons, it has a nor in Eighteenth-Century Studies least one new course was developed required internship, which he wants early in his sophomore year because in cognitive science, a "hot" interdis­ to take. "I started thinking about it "it seemed pretty important so I got ciplinary subject at many colleges, ac­ early. I wanted to combine it with it out of the way right in the begin­ cording to Spencer. Among other my major, sociology, and chose a ning." He feels that his minor will new courses is one developed by fac­ minor with the most courses that I go "hand in hand" with his unde­ ulty members Julia Smith of history would like and would count to­ clared history major. He's already and Helen Lang of philosophy on the wards my major and minor. Sociol­ completed two courses in the mi­ Middle Ages, which will serve as a ogy and economics are the two areas contin ued on page 8 core course for the minor in Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Andrea Bianchini, Kenneth Lloyd-Jones and Dario Del Puppo, all of modem lan­ guages, have created a course for the · same minor which compares the Re­ naissance literature of France, Italy William W. Stahl, and Spain. Professors Drew Hyland Jr. '74, senior vice of philosophy and Edward Sloan of president of Sotheby's Inc., was history have developed courses re­ auctioneer (right) lated. to technology for the minor in at the second Stu­ Technology and Culture. dent Auction for Spencer says that it's early at this Trinity. Over date to attempt to predict the "hot­ $13,700 was raised test" of the interdisciplinary minors. for the new aca­ demic building and He speculates, however, that the mi­ 3 nor in Computer Technology and Smith Alumni/Fa­ culty House. Modem Society might diminish the - popularity of the computer coordi­ nate major, and that the one in cog­ nitive science could develop into a major. "We've already had two or three students doing student­ designed majors in cognitive sci­ ence," he said. "The minors have given us a chance to get at a very popular field like this. I'm very pleased that we're having this Tech­ nology and Culture minor now, when, with our new liberal arts pro­ gram and our grant from the Sloan Foundation, we are trying to bring more courses dealing with technol­ ogy into the curriculum." Among the first students to for­ mally declare minors, Formal Orga­ nizations attracted the greatest number (15), followed by Women's Studies (8), Computer Technology and Modem Society (6), and Studies in Progressive American Social Movements (4). Spencer speculates that the popularity of Legal Studies and Formal Organizations may be owed to students' desire to use the minor for vocational testing. ALONG THE WALK

Another Eisenhower Comes to Trinity

BY ROBERTAjENCKES

hirty-five years after his famous T grandfather, "Ike," visited Trin­ ity, David Eisenhower came to campus in October. The senior Ei­ senhower came during the first term of his presidency to accept an honor­ ary doctorate. An inscribed stone on the Long Walk commemorates that day in 1954. The visit by writer/university lecturer David Eisenhower was sponsored by the Phi Kappa Educa­ tional Foundation, Inc. of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, which David joined as an undergraduate at Am­ herst College. As he laughingly told an appreciative audience at his public lecture, he had come previously to Trinity in 1966 as a member of Am­ herst's freshman squash team. They arrived only in time for the match, "got whipped badly" by the score of 9-0 and left in the dark of night, he 4 said. During this visit Eisenhower met - with senior history majors, advising them on their senior theses and reas­ suring them on the viability of their work. The 1628 8 1H'x 11" manu­ script pages of biography he had written on his grandfather were not so very different from their 150-page projects, he told them. What was re­ quired, he said, was that they make that "leap of faith" that they indeed had something to say. The 41-year-old Eisenhower, who is also writing a book on the year 1968 with his wife, Julie Nixon Ei­ senhower, reached that point himself in his three-volume work on his grandfather only after much strug­ gle. "The focus of this joint bio­ graphical project crystallized in the summer of1975, at the time of the Church Committee Senate investiga­ tions in Washington," he recalled. At the time he was a second-year law student at George Washington Uni­ versity, observing the investigations, underway less than a year after the resignation of his father-in-law, Richard Nixon, as President, and several months after the fall of Saigon IN 1954, President Dwight David Eisenhower, left, received an honorary and the end of the Vietnam War. doctoral degree from the College. Accompanying him during the cere­ "The Committee delved into the mony was Trinity President Albert C. Jacobs. ALONG THE WALK

Students Like Ike's Grandson

conduct of American foreign policy certain junior officers. I was so by American presidents in the Viet­ wrapped up in the chronology that nam era. There was a major reassess­ the chronology itself became the ment underway: at one level, of the writing. That was the initial leap of American presidency and at an even faith, that I could actually say some­ deeper level, of bigness, newness, thing about World War II." change - big government, big mili­ The writer estimates that he is tary, big corporations. The refrain about " mid-course" in his biographi­ struck close to home, to a warning cal project, which he undertakes that my grandfather issued on the from the Eisenhowers' home in Ber­ night ofJanuary 17, 1961, as he left wyn, Penn. , along with intermittent Washington. He warned the Ameri­ lecturing in political science at the can people in his final speech against University of Pennsylvania. Eisen­ the unwarranted acquisition of influ­ hower: At War 1943-1945 was pub­ ence by the military-industrial com­ lished in 1986. A second volume is plex. This kindled many memories in completed, but needs fme tuning. my mind. There was much to write Eisenhower emphasizes that he is not about and say through the eyes of a trained historian and did not under­ Dwight David Eisenhower, about take the writing of the biographies as the life and times he had experienced an academic project. "I think we're a in our recent history." long way from treating that adminis­ Although he originally envisioned tration historically, or any adminis­ this work rather narrowly as a re­ tration since 1932. There's sponse to the Church Committee, he contemporary treatment, and there's 5 decided that it would be necessary to historical treatment. I think the histo­ move back to the Eisenhower admin­ ries of every administration even go­ - WRITER David Eisenhower vis­ istration and situate him as president. ited the Trinity campus in Octo­ ing back to Roosevelt are yet to be "I think I encountered problems his­ ber and gave a public lecture. written." The mid-70s reassessment torians will sympathize with," he re­ by the Church Committee which calls. "I had an ending to this thing, gin his biography of Dwight Eisen­ provided the initial spark for his 1969 [the year of Eisenhower's hower in the fall of 1943 with the work was one in which he was not death), but I didn't know where to World War II experiences which disinterested. "My family repre­ begin. Along the way, I encoun­ changed irreversibly his life and sented 13 of those years," he says, tered what I think is a truism about the course ofhistory. "One of the adding that he sought through his the American presidency. I believe things I recognized that was different work to make "a claim in the out­ that the presidency is, above all, a about my granddad from other come of the argument." In his grand­ mission-oriented job. One of the American presidents is that he·served father's life and work during decades questions I was asking by then was, in Europe. His past, his orientation of tremendous change, there was 'Why was Dwight Eisenhower in the was different, and that had to do with much to say, and the work, he felt, presidency?' He was there because he the experience of the Americans in was "something that objective third was a popular man, to some degree Europe. I didn't know what that ex­ party historians somewhere down because he was a hero, but above all perience was." The young Eisen­ the road would have to consult." he was elected president in 1952 be­ hower determined that to understand cause I believe the times required the his grandfather, he would need to re­ David Eisenhower's research and ob­ kinds of attributes that he could con­ create the momentous World War II servations on his famous grandfather tribute in the job. experience as best he possibly could. and his privileged position as an ob­ "The overriding mission confront­ With 13 primary sources, including ing the next president in 1952 could the diary of Eisenhower, and numer­ server of the Washi11gton political probably be summarized in his slo­ ous secondary sources, he began to scene in the 1960s and 70s have gan, 'I shall go to Korea.' The world relive World War II, day by day, dis­ yielded some fascinating "nuggets." faced a crisis. The American people patch by dispatch, what was being Herewith are some of those, gleaned turned naturally to an individual as­ reported to Eisenhower, what was from his Trinity visit. sociated with the Alliance of World being reported to Churchill. " I began War II when that relationship had in some strange way, especially late Eisenhower the man: "He worked." at night, to experience World War II, had innate physical courage. That The writer knew that he had to be- as it must have been experienced by counted for a lot in the military. I ALONG THE WALK

worked for him on the farm for five president succeeds and his mission is cations as a professional actor. years when I lived in Gettysburg. He fulfilled, the American people histor­ Americans are living in an age in was rarely asking any of the farm­ ically feel sentimental or grateful to­ which they are conscious that televi­ hands to do something that he hadn't ward that president, but something sion and other mass media perhaps already mastered himself. He was begins to happen. inject a dimension into politics that somewhat of a remote figure, so "Nixon was elected in 1968 with we don't understand and can't con­ much older than I am, but he had cer­ the overriding mission of solving the trol. That is, Americans are afraid of tain ideas of what a well-balanced life Vietnam War; when he appeared on being manipulated." was and he made that available for us the podium at his second inaugural in on the farm. He was somebody with 1973 he was, I believe, a complete On Truman: "I don't really under­ deep experiences; he had done a lot of success in the job of the presidency stand their difficulties myself. From a things in his life. I remember every­ by any yardstick. Dwight Eisen­ distance I think someone would be thing seemed very consequential hower was elected president in 1952 inclined to look back at Harry Tru­ when I was a child, and even somber. with the mission of ending the war in man and say, 'What was the quarrel I felt even at the time what a great ex­ Korea, of approaching the Soviets all about?' They had a lot in com­ perience in World War II his was, early on to begin conversations about mon - from the same part of the what a tremendous event that was in disarmament, of meeting at the Sum­ country, within 100 miles of each our history and in world history." mit in 1955, facing down domestic other, same background. Truman challenges toward that policy and must have known how to make Ei­ As a controversial figure: making it a bipartisan one, running senhower very angry, and vice versa. "Dwight D. Eisenhower is contro­ for reelection in 1956, and through "The transition from Truman to versial in a sort of hidden way. He his election enabling the American Eisenhower was a very bitter one. was an exceptional kind of president. people to ratify those initiatives. I be­ It's just human nature. The ani­ What justified a military man's cross­ lieve that on election night in 1956, mosity is always directed at your ing that boundary from the military Dwight D . Eisenhower was a com­ successor, never your predecessor. life to the political: that's why he's plete success in the presidency. That Eisenhower bore no ill will toward controversial. That's why Ulysses was not the beginning of an Eisen­ Harry Truman at all. Truman felt Grant was controversial after the hower era; Eisenhower was in passionately about Eisenhower. My 6 Civil War. I suggest in this book at trouble. granddad didn't think a thing of Tru­ one point there is a parallel in their "One thing, parenthetically, that man, but he felt passsionately about - careers." Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Kennedy. I don't think Kennedy felt Nixon had in common: the problems much about Eisenhower, but his peo­ Revisionist views: "The first confronting their administration ple felt passionately about Johnson thing that interested historians in were foreign policy problems and in­ and were willing to destroy Johnson Eisenhower was Vietnam. The Ei­ herently short-range. Contrast the in '68 even at the risk of elevating senhower administration had faced a rhythms of the Eisenhower and Nixon to the presidency. It's human decision in Vietnam and not gone in. Nixon years with those of Roosevelt, nature: you have this splendid re­ Suddenly, there's a feeling that elected with a domestic mandate to sponsibility, access to this great there's a wisdom in that administra­ solve the Depression: this was an in­ house and this great institution; you tion and that maybe there were hid­ herently long-range job." live in a way that not the greatest mil­ den sources of truth here that we lionaire in lives; you're at ought to investigate. Presidents on TV: "Fifteen years the center of things; and all of a sud­ "As I began to delve back into the ago people would have dismissed the den some guy moves into your Eisenhower administration and be­ idea that Eisenhower was an effective house, your bedroom . . . " yond, I grasped how consistent television president, because Ken­ things have really been since 1945. nedy was so effective. Now that On Roosevelt: "Eisenhower occu­ World War II really brought on a sys­ we've had a Reagan era, I think that pied in World War II the position of tem and an outcome that we have we've come to appreciate that effec­ the highest trust and confidence that been living with ever since. The tiveness on television oftentimes a president can bestow on any indi­ events in Europe that we're seeing doesn't make an analytical method of vidual. He was in charge of the Euro­ going on right now are the first true evaluating presidents. Reagan's per­ pean Theatre, and the European change really since 1945." formances in the two debates in '84 Theatre was not something that was against Mondale would have by an obvious choice for us, although it The presidency: "When a presi­ definition in '60 positively disquali­ may seem so in retrospect. Dwight dent is confronting the mission that fied him for ever and all time from Eisenhower was entrusted with car­ his presidency has assigned him to ever being elected into the White rying that policy out. He admired address, he deploys the full array of House. These were astonishing per­ Roosevelt as an individual; he ad­ formal and informal powers that we formances. Yet that was fairly effec­ mired his wartime leadership. He got associate with powerful presidents. tive television. to know Roosevelt in the spring of Success in the presidency does not "Ronald Reagan is somebody who '42, because he was a courier between mean future effectiveness; when a was trained in the skills of communi- the War Department and the White ALONG THE WALK

-7

WHILE on campus, David Eisenhower offered advice to senior history majors about writing their senior theses. From left: Michael Vandall, Robert Sickinger, Meg Watters and Eisenhower.

House on the MacArthur matter. He On Nixon: "Nixon spent a tremen­ will see on file one of the best sources saw him daily. He became a Republi­ dous amount of time writing on my granddad's life and times. can when he saw Harry Hopkins his own speeches. It was one of the That is a diary that my granddad's draped in the Lincoln Bedroom with ways he kept himself informed about secretary, Nancy Whitman, kept of his feet on the bed. In other words, what was going on in the executive the comings and goings around the he thought they were just too darned branch. The other thing was to spend Oval Office. It is full oflots of nug­ settled in. He smelled even in the three days preparing for a press con­ gets. A typical entry was: 'This spring of 1942 that maybe it should ference. Nixon viewed the press con­ morning the President departed be time for a change." ference as a performance, as his early, to play golf at Burning Tree, opportunity to try to tie everything and as he left, he paused at the door together." and sighed, 'Dear God, give me the On PaHon: " He admired Patton strength to hit it easy.' ' tremendously. Patton knew it. He On the upcoming book on " I can actually document the very knew that Eisenhower worshipped 1968: " If nothing else, we want to beginning of my writing career. I him, and he took advantage of understand the Watergate period and have documentation due to the mira­ Eisenhower." the things that caused the resigna­ cle of modern presidential record tion. To do that, you have to experi­ keeping. An entry on July 14, 1958, On MacArthur: "My grandfather ence Vietnam. Vietnam is much reads: 'David, aged 10, came in bear­ worked for Douglas MacArthur in harder. The Watergate period is a ing the manuscript of the novel he Washington for six years as an aide. holiday compared to the Vietnam had written. ' My cousin Janet had He called Eisenhower 'the best clerk I War. " come East from Chicago in the sum­ ever had, ' and Eisenhower call ed mer of 1957, and she made a big im­ MacArthur 'the finest instructor of Presidential record keeping: pression on me, so I had written a dramatics I ever studied with.' " " If you go to Abilene, Kansas, you novel entitled Janet's Stay. I did the ALONG THE WALK

EISENHOWER logical thing with Janet's Stay that writer needs a first - I got a letter was somebody you didn't argue with morning. I walked up to the Presi­ from him that I still have. He wrote a whole lot, somebody who'd seen dent's secretary, and I said, 'Please that he had read janet's Stay to Mrs. and done a lot, was very sure of him­ type this up.' She produced a manu­ Nixon and the girls, and they all self. When I went back to the fall of script and we ambled over to one of agreed that I was one of their very 1943, the Dwight Eisenhower that these newfangled xerox machines favorite authors." came into view was a very different and we ran offlO copies. July 14, I do individual. What you had there was remember this very well, the Ma­ The Family's Political Future: somebody involved in a great strug­ rines landed in Lebanon that morn­ "One of our avowed objectives is gle. He was struggling with the War. ing. Cabinet members and National that Pennsylvanians have not heard I was struggling with the book, so I ~ccurity Council members met. I put the last of the Eisenhower I felt a sort of oneness with this indi­ the thing on sale outside the Oval Of­ Nixon name in elected politics, and vidual which would not have been fice at 15 cents a copy, and I went so those names arc: Jenny, age 11, possible otherwise. To discover this through the first printing in about 30 Alex, 9, and Melanic, 5. If you don't dimension made it possible to deal minutes. hear from me, you 'II hear from with the Eisenhower presidency. "That was, I believe, the third time them." "The better you know a subject, the that I met my future father-in-law, less surprised you arc. There is a cer­ Richard Nixon. He was delighted to Surprises: "The big surprise to me tain amount of denial when you're pay the 15 cents, took it home and was a general one. The man I knew rooting for somebody. You don't two and a half weeks later - every as a president, a former president, want to see their bad side."

conti11u ed from page 3 have discussed course content for boundaries are often confining. At nor- History 102 and 18th­ the various courses in the minor; a Trinity we've added interdisciplin­ Century Art and Architecture; in the group that includes most of us is in­ ary programs in American studies, spring semester he'll be taking volved in editing an anthology; and public policy studies, and area stud­ Mozart and 18th-Century Music, a this semester we are meeting for the ies, as well as guided studies and 8 core course for the minor taught by first time with our counterparts at the new interdisciplinary science - John Platoff. the Institute of Living. We hope to program. Alison Rivers '92 declared a mi­ construct an internship that would "In a world that is increasingly in­ nor in Medieval and Renaissance be optional at least, enabling stu­ terdisciplinary," Spencer concluded, Studies by process of elimination. dents to experience in part the excit­ "a world that does not respect these "I thought about it last year. There ing research being done at the neat and tidy disciplinary boxes, it's were just a few I was interested in: Institute. We've been looking for very important for students to have Marine Studies and Studies in Pro­ common research interests with the had some interdisciplinary experi­ gressive American Social Move­ neuroscientists, psychologists and ence of a fairly substantial and sys­ ments were two others. I decided doctors there, and they seem to tematic sort." that I didn't want the biology mi­ value the connection in our di­ nor, and PASM has an internship rection. " which I didn't think I could devote Comments like Professor Lloyd's The approved minors are: Asian that much time to. That narrowed it expressing support for the minor are Studies, Classical Antiquity, the down to Medieval and Renaissance heard often by Dean of the Faculty Classical Tradition, Cognitive Sci­ Studies. This semester I took Shake­ Jan Cohn and other members of the ence , Computer Technology and speare and History 101. N ext semes­ General Education Council, the fac­ Modern Society, Creative Arts, ter I'm taking Major Religious ulty committee which oversees the Eighteenth-Century Studies, Formal Figures of the West and The Rise of non-major requirements, according Organizations, Human Movement the University. I'm majoring in En­ to Spencer. " Almost 100 faculty are Studies, Latin American Studies, glish, and I did think the minor was contributing one or more courses to Legal Studies, Marine Studies, Me­ a nice fit." one or more minors, and about 70 dieval & R enaissance Studies, Mod­ Assistant Professor of Philosophy faculty have been involved in an ac­ ern European Studies {19th C entury Dan Lloyd has been an active partic­ tual planning group that produced a European Studies or 20th Century ipant in the minors program, direct­ mmor. European Studies), Mythology, Per­ ing the one in cognitive science and " Over the past 15 or 20 years forming Arts, Russian Studies, So­ teaching courses that appear in there has been in the academe in viet Studies, Studies in Progressive others. "One of the nice functions of general and at Trinity in particular American Social Movements, Tech­ the minors is to bring faculty to­ a growing interest in both multi­ nology and Culture, Third World gether to discuss common interests and interdisciplinary work, a sense Studies, and Women's Studies. in research and teaching. All of us that the conventional disciplinary ALONG THE WALK

"This internship was a very nice way for me, as an alumnus, to sup­ ALEXIS Brasbicb '90. felt. in­ terned at Strawbetly Banke. port both institutions: the College and the charitable organization I'm involved with. It's important to have a good selection of college in­ terns at Strawbery Banke," said French. ''I'm very pleased with this sum­ mer's results and I hope it will de­ velop a nice link between American studies at Trinity and Strawbery Banke. I hope we have another in­ tern of Alexis's caliber next summer." Over 300 Trinity students each year participate in a variety of in­ ternships, and approximately half of each class completes at least one in­ ternship before graduation, said Anne Lundberg Utz, coordinator of Trinity's internship program. Dur­ ing the summer about two dozen students undertake internships for History Comes Alive tant curator of Strawbery Banke. academic credit, and many others In Internship "I was very lucky to be the first do non-credit internships for their intern from Trinity," said Brashich, own benefit. Sponsored by Alumnus a New York City resident. "I loved Portsmouth, living and working in 9 a totally different town. When I 'Jones Project' Allows Alexis Brashich '90 spent last wasn't working, I was exploring - Dorm Residents summer on the seacoast, but she big-time - walking, biking, bor­ wasn't just hanging out on the rowing a car to explore the coast. I To Live, Learn Together was sad to see it end." beach. II II II II 1111111 .... II ~I IIIII IIIII II II II II II II II II II II 1111 For two months, the senior Before heading north to New American studies major lived and Hampshire, Brashich spent two For the first time since the late worked as an intern at Strawbery weeks in Newport, R.I., studying 1970s, a large group ofTrinity Banke, an historic coastal neighbor­ with the Victorian Society of Amer­ freshmen is living under one roof. hood in Portsmouth, N.H., which ica. The previous summer, she More than 100 new students are spans three centuries of social worked at the Information Ex­ participating in the "Jones Project," history. change of the New York Municipal a program designed by the Office of During her stay, Brashich lived in Art Society. After graduation, she Residential Services and named for the 18th-century Hough House and plans to pursue "something along the dormitory in which the fresh­ explored varied aspects of Straw­ the museum lines." men are housed. Unlike freshman bery Banke's operation. She mea­ Jameson S. French '75, an over­ dormitories of the last decade, the sured window sills and door frames seer and former president of the Jones Project offers its residents not of old buildings, pored over probate board of Strawbery Banke, pro­ only a chance to live together but to records, did research on genealogy vided funding for the new intern­ learn together. and social history, worked on in­ ship. A history major at Trinity, he "We were interested in repeating ventories, toured historic homes and has maintained a strong interest in the freshman dorm experience, but even assisted on a video project American history and historic pres­ with more of a master plan to it," about Strawbery Banke. "I had no ervation. "I have a long-running says Kristina B. Dow, director of idea that I would be doing so much. interest in Strawbery Banke. My residential services. "Our goal was I thought I would just be doing re­ grandparents helped get it estab­ more than simply putting freshmen search on houses," she said af­ lished in the late '50s and early '60s," together." terwards. he said. " I live in the neighborhood; The centerpiece of that goal is "Alexis was great; she just has so I keep actively involved. I helped University 101, a Sunday evening much energy. We were happy to with a major capital campaign and workshop series that is held in Jones have her," said Karin Cullity, assis- the hiring of the new director. for residents of the dormitory and ALONG THE WALK

the students who comprise the resi­ of people of different ages. People The residents ofJones volun­ dential services staff. Topics last fall tended to go into their rooms and teered to be housed in a freshman included "Reproductive Health: close their doors. dormitory. According to Dow, Yes, We're Talking About AIDS;" "The students in Jones are all Jones could have been filled twice "Families: Dynamics and Commu­ in the same boat," he continues. over with students willing to partici­ nication;" and "Time/Stress Man­ "Throughout the dorm, the stu­ pate in the project. Those admitted agement: Beyond Mid-Terms and dents are really all friends. " It is include 30 students enrolled in two Onward to Finals." Although it is not unusual to see students staying freshman seminars. not mandatory, says Dow, atten­ up after studying to play cards or to "This has been a wonderful addi­ dance at the programs has been talk, he adds. tion to the freshman seminar," says strong. ''I'd have given anything to have Gail H. Woldu, assistant dean of the "It's a pretty good way to intro­ this kind of experience in my fresh­ faculty and special assistant to the duce new things that you don't get man year," says Ann E. Newman president, who teaches a seminar on in the classroom," Scott Toth '93 '91, whose assignment is to develop Afro-American music. "The nature says of University 101. programming that will help fresh­ of the class discussion is freer. " Stu­ In addition to University 101 , the men through their first year at Trin­ dents may disagree, she says, but College has provided students in the ity. "There were only 10 women on their debates are congenial. They Jones Project with new furnishings my hall when I was a freshman, and also appear to be discussing their and has ensured that each of the I only got friendly with two of reading outside of class, she says. three floors in the dormitory in­ them. The students inJones already Woldu is not alone in her positive cluded a social lounge and a study know 100 people in their Class. I reaction to the Jones Project. Dow room. More than the normal com­ didn't know that many until the end says some freshmen were concerned plement of residential staff also was of last year!" that life in Jones would be repres- assigned to Jones. A concentration of resources, says Dow, is one of the 10 benefits afforded the Jones Project residents. - "The students in Jones also have a greater feeling of confidence in their living situation," Dow says. "The students are able to say 'We're all new. We're all in the same boat.' No question is too stupid." The Jones Project also allowed the College to identify role models for the freshmen, since members of the residential staff are the only upper­ classmen living in the dormitory. Dow says these students are doing a wonderful job, and she credits them with the project's success. "The staff is clearly trying to make this a really good, solid ex­ perience for freshmen," says Dow. "They are really thinking about what they're doing. They're taking it very seriously." William D. Grube '92 is one of the staff members in Jones. He says he is impressed with the camaraderie in the dorm. "The Jones Project is everything I wish last year could have been for me," Grube says. "Last year I lived THE OFFICE of Admissions held a visitation program for students of color. The three-day event in November acquainted 73 high school students with on a floor with upperclassmen. life at Trinity. Top photo, Professor ofBiology John E. Simmons, left, chats There were so many different kinds with students. Above, President Tom Gerety, center, meets with the group. ALONG THE WALK

sive, but no one has asked to move. unteers have focused their attention In addition to a lecture by Barbara "Members of the residential staff upon the 1989-90 Annual Fund Solomon, author of the book, In the are conscious that freshman dorms drive. This year's goal is to raise a Company of Educated Women, the can become party dorms, and they record-breaking $2.3 million in un­ April 28 program will include a lun­ are trying to impress on students restricted support. Unrestricted an­ cheon address by President Tom that you can exercise individual free­ nual gifts are essential for Trinity's Gerety and discussion of such topics doms and not impinge on the rights daily operation, because they make as "Coeducation at Trinity: The of others," says Dow. available funds which can be used Early Years," "The Feminization of This message is easier to convey where they are most needed. As of the Faculty," "Sex and Gender in to a group of students who are all December 1, nearly $400,000 had the Classroom," and "Life After freshmen, says resident coordinator been contributed to the Annual Trinity: Women's Roles/Women's Elizabeth S. White '91. For instance, Fund. Lives." Opening the weekend on if seniors living in a dormitory with Alumni Fund Class Agents and April 27 will be panels focusing on freshmen are making an unreason­ Parents' Fund volunteers have been the role of women in student activi­ able amount of noise, the freshmen active throughout the fall in generat­ ties: "Trinity Women in Sports: A might be intimidated and do noth­ ing contributions to this year's goal. New Sisterhood" and "The Femi­ ing to stop it. Almost 100 alumni and parents nists and the Greeks." "The students in Jones have a lot joined in making phonathon calls Alumnae who already have deliv­ of respect for each other," White throughout November and Decem­ ered lectures as part of the year-long says. As of late November, no ber from sites in Hartford, Boston, celebration include Nina McNeely member of the Jones residential staff Stamford, and New York City. "It Diefenbach '80, associate manager had received a complaint about is this kind of enthusiastic support of development at the Metropolitan noise, she adds. "We believe that if which gives us every reason to be­ Museum of Art; Sharin Y. Sakurai we create a very solid freshman ex­ lieve that we can reach our $2.3 mil­ '86, a graduate student in neurobiol­ perience, we'll find that some of it lion goal by June 30," reports ogy; Kathy Martin '75, a scientist at continues naturally," says Dow. Director of Annual Giving Jeff Bionetics Research Inc. at the Fred­ 11 "As the Jones freshmen move Wahlstrom. erick Cancer Research Facility; and - through the College, we'll ask them Throughout January and Febru­ Rebecca Adams '74, associate pro­ to help evaluate the experience. My ary, the development office will be fessor of sociology at the University hope is that they'll continue to reap holding alumni and parent phona­ of North Carolina. Among the lec­ the benefits of this throughout their thons at sites across the country, turers scheduled for the spring upperclass years." with student phonathons to begin in semester are Barbara Bass '72, a tox­ Dow says that the residents of the spring. In addition to the peren­ icologist working in the area of risk Jones are not the only students in nial locations, new calling sites in assessment; Elizabeth Endicott­ a "living and learning" situation. New Haven; Rochester, N.Y.; West '74, assistant professor of Trinity offers all students a chance Providence; and Chicago are being Asian studies at Harvard University; to form special interest groups and considered. Alumni who are inter­ trustee JoAnne A. Epps '73, assis­ live together. This year, for in­ ested in hosting a phonathon event tant professor at the Temple Uni­ stance, DavidS. Cesal '91, orga­ or helping to make calls, should versity Law School; and Mary B. nized a Chinese cultural group. contact the Trinity development of­ Salter '73, an independent film Special interest groups must com­ fice at (203) 297-2134. producer. prise eight students, have a faculty A juried exhibit of art by alumnae sponsor, and provide at least one will be displayed in Widener Gallery program per semester for the cam­ Yearlong Events from April 9 through 30, and the pus community. Celebrate 20 Years Trinity Community Orchestra will "It's really exiting to think about celebrate coeduation in a concert on our dorms as more than merely bar­ Of Coeducation April 21. racks," says Dow. For more information about events that are part of the 20th an­ Annual Fund Final plans are under way for the niversary of coeducation, write to April 27-29 celebration of "Coedu­ Naomi Amos, director of faculty Pace Accelerates cation at Trinity: Women Making a grants, Trinity College, Hartford, ...... Difference," and academic depart­ Conn. 06106; or call (203) 297-2010. ments already are marking the 20th Registration materials for the April With the $50 million Campaign anniversary of this historic occasion 27-29 weekend will be available in for Trinity completed, Trinity vol- with their own special events. January. . ALONG THE WALK

Hills, Mass. was elected vice presi­ dent and Scott A. Mattoon of Dal­ las, Texas was elected secretary. David T. Shapiro ofNewing­ ton, Conn. was elected president of the sophomore class. Paige L. Bridges ofHo-Ho-Kus, N.J. was elected vice president and Karen M. Isgur of Northampton, Mass. was elected secretary. 200 Contribute to Connie Ware Fund

A memorial fund honoring Con­ stance E. Ware, former vice presi­ dent for development at Trinity, currently stands at $34,908, with gifts from 200 donors. The fund was established with gifts from alumni, family and friends after her THEATER OF THE FEMALE BODY was the subject of a conference held death in March. She was a member in October at Trinity and Hartford's TheaterWorks. Central to the event of the Trinity administration for 25 were performances of"Dr. Charcot's Hysteria Shows," an e?s~mble pe~o r­ years, joining the College's public mance art event created by Lenora Champagne, Judy D worm 70 and D I­ relations staff in 1964 and working anne Hunter, all of whom teach at Trinity. in the development office from 1970 12 Magazine Receives tion A wards in the College Divi­ until her death. - sion. Overall, the competition The income from the fund will be National Awards attracted 1,603 entries. used to provide financial aid stu­ ...... dents with the funds necessary to meet unusual needs or take advan­ The Reporter was honored by two Officers Elected tage of special opportunities which national education organizations In Classes, SGA do not fall within the normal finan­ in recent months for publishing cial aid package, such as study achievements...... abroad or special research projects. The top award, a gold medal for Student Government Association According to Director of Develop­ the "Best Article of the Year" was officers and senior, junior and soph­ ment Laurence S. Duffy the purpose presented to Jack Chatfield, assistant omore class officers were elected in of the Fund was enthusiastically en­ professor of history, for his recollec­ September. dorsed by Connie's husband, Dick tion, SNCC: Corning of Age in the Melissa R. Gold '90 ofRiver Vale, Ware, and their sons, who said it '60s, in the summer 1988 issue. The N.J., was elected president of the was just what Connie would have medal, presented by the Council for Student Government Association. liked, helping one or two students the Advancement and Support of The other new SGA officers are: each year to participate fully in the Education (CASE), was one of 11 Sharon A. Simkiss '90 ofWynne­ broad range of experiences that given in a competition among en­ wood, Pa., vice president; Christine make a Trinity education complete. trants from 370 institutions. M. DiStefano '90 of Briarcliff, CASE also awarded the magazine N.Y., secretary; and Malcolm F. Cinestudio Anniversary with a bronze medal for the fall 1988 MacLean IV '92 ofDanvers, Mass., cover. The winning photograph of a treasurer. Cinestudio, the campus movie theater, will celebrate its 20th anni­ Samburu dancer was taken on the Scott E . Goldsmith of New York, versary in February, 1990. People Trinity alumni safari by Reporter edi­ N.Y., was elected president of the who have worked at Cinestudio over tor Bill Churchill. The medal was senior class. David R. Hupper of the past 20 years are invited to return one of five awarded out of 153 New Canaan, Conn. was elected to the campus theater for a celebra­ entnes. vice president and Gina M. Tarallo tory gathering on Saturday, Feb. 17, The magazine was also recog­ ofRidgewood, N.J. was elected sec­ 1990. The event will feature a screen­ nized for overall excellence by the retary. ing of "Yell ow Submarine," the first National School Public Relations Mark L. Russell of Bethesda, Md. film shown at Cinestudio. Call Association (NSPRA). Trinity was elected president of the junior Cinestudio at (203) 527-3911 for received one of 44 Honorable Men- class. Thomas C. Briggs of Feeding more information. THE SIXTIES

A recollection of a decade of rebellion and ferment.

BY j. RONALD SPENCER '64

" T he Sixties" is a topic with special resonance the "Snick" (SNCC) workers, both white and for those of us who were born between black, impressed all but the most politically indif­ Pearl Harbor and the Korean War and thus ferent among us. Finally, though we couldn't came of age between roughly John Kennedy's elec­ know it at the time, American military involve­ tion in 1960 and George McGovern's defeat in ment in Indochina was about to take a decisive 1972. When the Class of '64 graduated, the United turn: the Tonkin GulfResolution passed Congress States was on the verge of a period of almost un­ less than three months after we graduated, the imaginable political turmoil and cultural upheaval. bombing ofNorth Vietnam began in earnest in Granted, a surface calm prevailed in the land on February, 1965, and by the end of that year U .S. that fine June day when we received our bachelor's troop strength in South Vietnam had risen to degrees. But one didn't have to look too hard to 84,000. detect subterranean currents of dissatisfaction and Whatever one's politics, the next half-dozen dissent already gathering force. years were a wrenching time. The period from The literature with which some of us were fasci­ 1967 to 1970, in particular, was, as Todd Gitlin has nated- ranging from Salinger throughJoseph written, like "a cyclone in a wind tunnel." The 13 Heller's Catch 22 and Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" to war escalated steadily: over 500,000 U.S. troops - Malraux's Man's Fate and Camus' The Plague­ were committed by the time of the Tet offensive spoke to our feelings of alienation, a growing un­ in early 1968, and American planes ultimately ease with the potentially corrupting materialism of dropped four times the tonnage of bombs on Indo­ an affluent society, a restless yearning for a life of china that they had dropped in all ofWorld War II . action to certify our authenticity. Reports ofStron­ The anti-war movement also escalated, shifting tium 90 in the food chain because of atmospheric from teach-ins and petition campaigns to massive nuclear testing, plus a generalized anxiety about protest demonstrations, draft resistance, and, on nuclear apocalypse, had led a few of us to the its outermost fringes, efforts to cripple the war ma­ Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and other chine through acts of sabotage. Everywhere, mili­ peace groups. The question of whether it was bet­ tancy and rebelliousness abounded- in the N ew ter to be "Red or dead" was being debated here, al­ Left, on the campuses, among blacks, and - a lit­ beit in muted tones. When George Will publicized tle later - on the part of women, gays and other the Ben Reid case in The Tripod in early 1962, the groups that felt existing social arrangements were issue of capital punishment was moved into the intolerably oppressive. foreground of our consciousness. Students for a Simultaneously, a "counterculture" burgeoned, Democratic Society was unknown at Trinity in contemptuous of traditional mores, fueled partly 1964, as it was on most campuses. But its Port Hu­ by psychoactive drugs, es pousing a vision of un­ ron Statement, setting forth the compelling idea of inhibited sexuality, of a "new consciousness," of "participatory democracy," was already two years alienation overcome through the creation of a lov­ old. Soon, SDS would begin a great leap forward ing community - a sort of perpetual Woodstock in membership and visibility, as the events of the Nation. On every hand, conventional wisdom was next few years lent seemingly ever-greater force to questioned, authority mocked, established institu­ its radical critique of American society and U.S. tions derided. To adapt a phrase of Marx's, it foreign policy. seemed that everything solid was melting into air. Closer to hand, thanks largely to Jack Chatfield This was an intensely ideological time, a time of '64 and to Ralph Allen '64, we had the stirring ex­ passionate sloganeering: "do your own thing" . .. ample of the Southern civil rights movement. The "Hell, no, we won't go" ... "don't trust anyone courage, idealism and sheer existential bravura of over thirty" ... " flower power," " Black Power," hornAs ern 1J Jr up G!!J

WAR PROTESTS were a familiar event in the 1960s.

"Power to the People" ... "tune in, turn on, drop stoned on marijuana, blowing soap bubbles, wear­ out" . .. "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh/NLF Is Going ing a Revolutionary War uniform. Then there was To Win" ... etc., etc. the remarkable series of Yip pie put-ons during the As old restraints dissolved and decorum was run-up to the 1968 Democratic convention in tossed onto the ash heap, elements of the adversary Chicago: the threat to contaminate the city's water culture mounted some astonishing stunts, bringing supply with LSD, to kidnap delegates off to Wis­ to politics a kind of anarchistic theatricality: Abbie consin, to import "super studs" to seduce the dele­ Hoffman, dressed in a cowboy suit and firing two gates' wives and daughters. cap pistols, disrupted a meeting of the Socialist Such antics aside, we of course know that far too Scholars' Conference with a demand that Herbert many of the events of the Sixties were occasions Marcuse, the rather ponderous German Marxist, not for mirth but, rather, for weeping: stop reading his paper and start smoking dope; and • Three civil rights workers murdered in Phila­ Jerry Rubin answered a subpoena from the once­ delphia, Mississippi, during the Freedom Summer feared House Un-American Activities Committee of 1964; • The Quaker Norman Morrison immolating zation has created;" of an intellectual like Susan himself in front of the Pentagon in 1965; Sontag asserting that the United States was a • The assassination of Malcolm X in 1965 and of "doomed country" and that "the white race is the Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy three cancer of human history;" of an academic like years later; Louis Kampf, at the time president of the Modern • An unprecedented wave of racial rioting, be­ Languages Association, declaring that, "The ginning in 1964 and culminating with outbreaks in movement should have harassed Lincoln Center 110 American cities- including the nation's capi­ from the beginning. Not a performance should go tal - following the King assassination; by without disruption. The fountains should be • The endless, savage war, at once wreaking dried with calcium chloride, the statuary pissed on, havoc on the peoples of Vietnam, Cambodia and the walls smeared with shit." Laos and poisoning our own politics; Nor should one overlook the contempt that • The awful toll exacted by the "drug culture," some movement people expressed for the values, many of whose devotees suffered serious - and the aspirations and the simple patriotism of ordi­ sometimes irreversible - psychic and neurologi­ nary Americans- contempt that did much to dis­ cal damage. credit liberalism as well as radicalism, to shatter the The decade's long litany of tragedy, very much old Roosevelt coalition, and to drive many "eth­ abbreviated here, climaxed on May 4, 1970, when nics" and working people into the arms of Richard four students were cut down by National Guard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. M1s at Kent State - an event that provoked one Perhaps worst of all, in the closing years of the last great outburst of campus rage and activism, af­ decade there was growing fascination with vio­ ter which the mood sharply altered and "the Six­ lence in some sectors of the Left, and an attitude of ties" sputtered to an end. indulgent tolerance of it in others. Violence not simply as a political tactic, but as a morally elevat­ • • • ing and spiritually cleansing act. This was reflected Looking back, it's not hard to find things in the in the adulation of Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of Sixties that were hopeful and good: the surge of the Earth, in the romanticizing of the Black Panther moral passion, the insistent demand that America Party with all its military posturing, in the notori­ live up to its democratic and egalitarian ideals, the ous New York Review ofBooks cover giving instruc­ 15 overthrow of legally-enforced Jim Crow in the tions for how to make a Molotov cocktail. One of South, the rebirth of feminism, the reform and re­ its crudest manifestations came at the December, - invigoration of university life, the liberalization of 1969, "National War Council" of the Weather­ sexual mores, the diffusion through much of the men, where Bernadine Dohrn apotheosized the society ofa healthy skepticism about the claims of Manson Family for the Tate/LaBianca murders, established authority. Thanks partly to the strug­ and Mark Rudd, leader of the uprising at Colum­ gles of the Sixties, American society today is more bia, assured his fellow-ultras that, "It's a wonder­ open, more just, more egalitarian. ful feeling to hit a pig. It must be a wonderful I believe it would be a mistake, however, to ro­ feeling to kill a pig or blow up a building." manticize the Sixties or to celebrate its history un­ In the last analysis, the later Sixties had a very critically. For just as there was much in the high quota of self-delusion - the self-delusion of conduct of the U.S. government that was indefen­ a government that believed it could bomb Hanoi sible, so there is much in the record of the New into submission, of a counterculture that thought Left and the counterculture that repels. One its deification of the pleasure principle was subver­ thinks, for example, of the tortured apologetics for sive of capitalist values, of a Left that imagined rev­ various authoritarian regimes in the so-called "so­ olution was imminent in this, one of the most cialist camp," of the fundamentally flawed notion politically stable of countries. Now, some two de­ that there were "no enemies on the Left," of the cades later, an impulse exists to be nostalgic about apocalyptic belief, fairly widespread by 1968, that those heady days. It is an impulse we should resist. the only real alternatives facing the United States In essence, nostalgia is memory with the pain left were outright fascism or a root-and-branch revolu­ out. For our generation to re-imagine the Sixties tion of the Left. Equally false, as William O'Neil minus the pain would be to engage in the ultimate points out in his splendid history of the Sixties, act of self-delusion. was the counterculture's faith that you could make a revolution out of "dope, sex, militant gestures and dirty language." J. Ronald Spencer, a 1964 graduate of Trinity, is associate academic One thinks, too, of the reckless hyperbole of an dean of the College and a lecturer in history. He holds an M.A. in his­ tory from Columbia University, and has been a member of the Trin­ activist like Stokely Carmichael calling for a move­ ity administration since 1968. His article has been adapted from his ment that "will smash everything Western civili- remarks at a spring 1989 reunion seminar. Tearing Down the Wall

Proftssor Brigitte Schulz was teaching when her husband raced in with the news about the Berlin Wall. Since then, she and her colleagues in Soviet studies have talked about little else.

BY ELIZABETH A. NATALE

or the past two months, the eyes of the world ranged for two East German scholars who are in have been trained on East Germany. Among the United States this year to participate in a cam­ Fthose who are watching most closely are a pus discussion of the future of their homeland. number ofTrinity professors who, for personal Their presentation, just one week after the Wall and professional reasons, have been spellbound by opened, was commented on by Samuel Kassow, a the remarkable changes coinciding with the open­ Soviet specialist in the department ofhistory. In ing of the Berlin Wall. his remarks, Kassow outlined the rethinking of So­ " This government had little legitimacy from the viet security doctrine in the early 1980s that con­ beginning," says Brigitte Schulz, a new member tributed to the opening of the Berlin Wall. of the political science department and a native of " If the basic aim of the U.S.S.R.'s stance in Eu­ West G~rmany. Schulz, now an American citizen, rope since 1950 has been to weaken NATO and to J6 was a fellow of the International Research and Ex­ get the United States out of Europe, if it could do - change Board (IREX) and the first Fulbright so through relaxation of controls in Eastern Eu­ Scholar given permission to study in East Ger­ rope ... why shouldn't the Soviet Union try many, where she and her husband, William Han­ to achieve the same aim through less bellicose sen, and their son lived in 1983-84. Through means," Kassow told more than 100 professors IREX, Schulz traveled to Washington, D.C., on and students who braved a tornado watch to listen Nov. 21 to brief Congressional staff members on to the panelists. "Gorbachev has argued that Fin­ the situation in East Germany; and she was one of land, in a sense, was better off- as far as the five people to testify before the Congressional Soviet Union was concerned- being an indepen­ Committee on Foreign Affairs' Subcommittee on dent but neutral country: the benefits to the Soviet E~ropean Affairs. · economy are much better than if Finland were the "There was never an election (in East Ger­ 16th Soviet republic. many)," says Schulz, whose analyses of the "Aren't the Soviets gambling too much?" Kas­ changes in that country have been carried by Con­ sow asked. "Gorbachev . .. sincerely believes that neqicut newspapers and television and radio sta­ communism is not dead, that it's not seen its day, tions. "These self-appointed leaders never got into that the agenda is simply redefining socialism, that of4ce because there was a popular revolution. This the time will come when the working class in the makes it very different from China, this makes it Eastern European countries will come to see the very different from Cuba, and in a significant way Communist Party perhaps once again, in new makes it very different from the Soviet Union. form, as the defender of its legitimate interests. For Eastern European societies never had socialist rev­ example, I think it's true that most people of East­ olutions. ern Europe do not want bare-knuckle market "Governments that do not represent the major­ economy. They don't want to give up many of the ity of the population always go fast," Schulz con­ social and educational benef1ts they have gotten tinues. "Look at Iran. Look at Marcos and the used to under socialism. They would like to have Philippines. They are pressure cookers. Once the the living standards of a capitalist country with the explosion starts, it's unstoppable." Co11ti1111ed 011 page 20 Before the opening of the Berlin Wall, Schuh ar- ONCE A BARRIER, the Wall is now a meeting place. -17 Professor Celebrates With Friends, Family As Berlin Wall Opens

Karl Haberlandt recalls his own journey to free­ dom thirty years ago.

On March 2, 1959, Karl Hab­ erlandt boarded a train for freedom. The East German-born professor of psychology at Trinity was only 18 years old when he left his home­ land to begin a new life in the West. Despite the 30 years that have passed since that day, Haberlandt rejoiced when the Berlin Wall opened on A PHOTO of Karl Haberlandt's mother's family just after the Wall went up Nov. 9, recalling with each smiling is one of the professor's treasures. His brother Helmut is standing at the far East German face the happiness he left, behind his father, who is seated. felt at the moment he was free. Haberlandt, one of five children, secondary school that would pre­ trip seemed unending, Haberlandt was raised in Tangermiinde, a town pare him for college; but his father says, but they finally reached the of 15,000 inhabitants located 70 intervened. border between East Germany and 18 miles west of Berlin. He says his "He went to my teacher, and West Berlin. Haberlandt disem­ - leaving was a family decision­ they enrolled me in that organiza­ barked with his fellow passengers, one that was discussed for a long, tion," Haberlandt recalls. "You walked across the border, and got long time. know, the night before I left East into a commuter train. At one of the "We are a very closely knit fam­ Germany, I burned that member­ stops in West Berlin, he stepped off. ily, and it was tough to leave for ship card that I had never signed." "I felt like screaming, I was so that reason," Haberlandt says, his Haberlandt also was the only one of happy!" Haberlandt says. German accent still much in evi­ 15 boys in his high school class Haberlandt spent the next 20 days dence. "But anything, any job, who refused to "volunteer" for the in a refugee camp, first in West Ber­ was better than staying in East National People's Army, an act that lin and then near Hamburg. Because Germany. locked him out of university study. his high school diploma was not "I was a rebellious youth," he "I felt, even as a high school stu­ fully recognized in West Germany, says. "I always saw how my grand­ dent, that the ideology upheld by he enrolled in a program that of­ parents and parents listened to West the government was inhuman," fered the courses necessary to com­ German radio stations, which was Haberlandt says, noting that indi­ plete it; and in November 1959 he not permitted. Yet I could see that vidual rights and aspirations were began his studies at the Free Univer­ they felt oppressed. Even as chil­ worth nothing. "All that counted sity of Berlin. dren we had a double culture: a was the abstract notion of a work­ "As students, we worked all public face that you showed to your ers' paradise and everyone's subser­ kinds of jobs," Haberlandt says, teachers and schoolmates, and your vience. I wanted to go to university laughing. He delivered bread to real self shared with friends and and study what I wanted to study. I stores, swept streets, washed dishes, family." was after a liberal education." stuffed envelopes, pulled weeds, One of Haberlandt's first acts of On the morning of his departure, picked apples, and worked on an resistance, at age 13, was his refusal Haberlandt purchased a one-day, archaeological excavation. to join the "Free" German Youth, round-trip ticket to East Berlin. He He was even employed as an assis­ the Communist youth organization traveled with a high school friend, tant in a dance school. run by Erich Honecker. His deci­ who recited, in detail, the story of When he finished his studies in sion, he explains, would have pre­ The Caine Mutiny in order to calm 1964, Haberlandt came to the vented him from attending the Haberlandt's nerves. The three-hour United States for what was sup- posed to be a year of study at Yale University. At the end of the year, an unfinished research project and an American sweetheart kept him in this country. He became a U .S. citi­ zen in 1972. Haberlandt did not return to East Germany until 1975, when he worked up the courage to spend an afternoon in East Berlin. It was not until 1979 that he fmally returned to Tangermi.inde. Haberlandt, husband of Susan Martin '71 and the father of two, is in close touch with his mother and siblings, all of whom still live in East Germany. His brother Helmut, whom Haberlandt remembers call­ ing on the day the Wall went up, tel­ ephoned Haberlandt for the first time in 28 years on the day the Wall came down. Helmut is a member of the New Forum opposition group. " It won't be easy for him with all he faces," Haberlandt says of his youngest brother. "There are no democratic institutions in East Ger­ many, no democratic traditions. They have to construct everything from scratch. 19 "Helmut does feel that he doesn't - want to copy West Germany," Hab­ erlandt continues. Although the East Germans have been denied such civil liberties as free travel, they see on television that the West Ger­ mans have unemployment, spend a much higher percentage of their in­ come on rent, and have greater problems with drugs and AIDS. Helmut also told Haberlandt that people in the West seem to lack THE NEW FREEDOM in East Germany has made it much easier for Karl warmth in their interpersonal rela­ Haberlandt, above, to get news from his brother Helmut, a member of the tionships, an impression Haberlandt New Forum opposition group. suspects stems from the complete trust East Germans develop in fam­ ily and friends. ship between East and West Ger­ in part from his roots in that coun­ "Once you trust that someone many probably will come about in try. He says he also reacts to the will not betray you to the authori­ the context of the European Com­ changes as someone who has lived ties, you make a commitment to munity, he says, but he admits it is in the West for more than 30 years. that individual," Haberlandt says. hard to predict. "As an American, I am delighted; The reunification of the two Ger­ " If you had asked me two months and I would be even if I didn't have manies is something Haberlandt has ago, 'Karl, do you think the wall brothers and a sister in East Ger­ difficulty envisioning. In 45 years will be opened up pretty soon?,' I many," he says. "I hope this ena­ the two societies have grown apart, would have said, 'No. ' So much for bles us to forget about a big defense he says, and for almost 30 years real crystal balls!" build-up and to apply the money we interaction between the two has Haberlandt's excitement over the spent there on our own social been blocked. A stronger relation- changes in East Germany stem only problems." • JUBILANT GERMANS flocked to the Wall to see history in the making. Photo by Suunnc Trocklc

Continued fro m page 16 the workplace. Which is why the real model is so­ economic security of a socialist country." cial democracy and, really, Sweden. I think that's Schulz agrees . She says that given a chance to de­ the model they look to, not to the United States." cide, many East Germans would want democratic Looking to the futute, Kassow told the audience socialism. at the panel discussion that the "crisis" in East Ger­ "When I testified to (Congressman) Lee Hamil­ many is, on one hand, helpful to Gorbachev. Until ton, I said 'Look. Don't think that Eastern Eu­ recently, conservatives in the Communist Party ropean workers want to be like American said that reforms were unnecessary. workers, ' " she recounts. " They pity American "This crisis helps Gorbachev's position because workers, because American workers have no it makes it harder for the conservative opposition rights to speak of. They can be hired and fired to say 'Get out of here. We have better ideas,' " pretty much at will, and those are conditions that Kassow explained. "They can still say 'Get out of an East German or a Pole wouldn't put up with for here,' and they'd like to do that, but the problem a minute. is they don't have any better ideas. There are no " The people who are going to stay and are look­ models that are working any more." ing for reforms will look for some way of combin­ According to Schulz, the fast-paced changes in ing the elements of socialism with elements of a East Germany also are reason for concern. Al­ market economy, and free elections, and democ­ though reforms cannot take place quickly enough racy, " she adds. "But to them democracy means as far as the citizens are concerned, no govern­ more than just the right to vote. To them, democ­ ments, including those in the West, want the level racy would also mean some sort of a democracy in of instability that accompanies speedy change. "When there is too much anarchy, it gives an ex­ "The GDR can be integrated into Western Eu­ cuse for the conservative forces in the military, in rope, but not into West Germany," she says. politics, to take over again," she says. "It's out of "I think Gorbachev believes that it is possible to control right now. To all intents and purposes, achieve a high degree of economic integration and East Germany doesn't have a government .. .. even political confederation but that the political There is such massive distrust and such massive in­ elites of both of the German states understand that stability." it would be crazy even to put unification on the Despite her concern, Schulz disagrees with those agenda unless there's a real renegotiation of the alli­ who fear that East Germany might again become ances," Kassow says. the country it was before the Berlin Wall was In examining the situation in East Germany, opened. Even if Gorbachev is overthrown and Schulz says she sees an important foreign policy there is a resurgence of conservative communist lesson for the United States. That lesson, she says, rule, it will only be for the short term, she says. is something she made clear in her meeting with "In the long term, the people have lost their Congressional staff members in November. fear," Schulz says. She tells of East German stu­ "We also have been supporting dictatorships all dents who in 1983-84 warned her about the pres­ over the world . .. just like El Salvador now," ence of state spies at her lectures but who today Schulz says. "The Soviets for the longest time said say, "Report me; I don't care." people rising against the dictatorships they sup­ "This is what has changed," Schulz says. "Peo­ ported were counter-revolutionaries. Well, that's, ple have made the quantum leap from allowing in a way, what we're saying: 'the rebels' in El Sal­ themselves to be terrorized for 40 years to saying, vador. What are they rebelling against? Dicta­ 'No more. You have lost your power over me.' torships. Once you stand up like that, you have reclaimed "It is completely hypocritical to celebrate the the power of your life." rise against dictatorships in one part of the world Kassow and Schulz agree that talk of reunifying while supporting our own in another," she says. the Germanies is premature. The conditions are ''I'm really hoping that as part of all of this we will not right, says Schulz, and the fate of the German learn that the will of the people is important, even question is intricately linked to the future of Eu­ when they are brown people who grow bananas rope and superpower relations. The magnet that instead of white people who work in factories. Be­ 21 will draw East Germany to the West is not West cause in the end, history is on the side of people Germany but the European Community and 1992. who fight against oppression." • -

PROFESSORS Kassow and Schulz have spent many an hour discussing the amazing events in East Germany. BOOKS

by Trinity Authors

VERMONT Wilderness to State­ tionism and neuroscience and then is ploying it as a deterrent to crime. They hood 1748-1791 extended to encompass human con­ analyze landmark cases that have Barbara C. McGrath Hanson M'74 and sciousness and cognition. sparked controversy and have had a pro­ Warren W. Dexter The book discusses in detail both phil­ found impact on today's criminal law. osophical issues and empirical science. It Donald Hook is a professor of mod­ Academy Books (Rutland, Vt.), 1989, takes seriously the need to consider the ern languages at Trinity; his first career 175 pages, $15.95 paperback, plus $3, realities of both the physical organism was as a federal crime investigator. postage and handling and the mental representations that Lothar Kahn is professor emeritus at In this book, the authors have pre­ guide the interaction of the organism Central Connecticut State University. sented in text and some 65 photographs with its environment. and early maps the stories, journeys and I. Izja Lederhendler of the National efforts of some little-known men and Institutes of Health says of Simple Minds: STANDING ROOM women who contributed to the taming " This book is very important. The ideas Prose Poems of the Green Mountain wilderness. in which Lloyd is interested are exciting. Gian Lombardo '75 Gravestones, maps, manuscripts, ge­ His synthesis is a restructuring of the nealogies and early town records were ways to think about the mind. It can Dolphin-Moon Press, Baltimore, 1989, studied and analyzed in a search for de­ have a significant impact." Jay L. Gar­ 80 pages, $6, softbound tail. The authors guide the reader from field of Hampshire College says, "This This collection of short tales and prose the wilderness of the French & Indian is a superb book .. . The integration of poems by Gian Lombardo follows War era, through the early township empirical with philosophical claims and Between Islands, a collection of poems grants to the development of the state arguments is excellent. There is nothing and verse translations, published by of Vermont. forced about the interdisciplinarity of Dolphin-Moon in 1984. Ms. Hanson is a public relations spe­ this investigation." "Standing Room is a tortured alphabet cialist and elder advocate for the South­ of dreams, " writes Michael Martone. western Vermont Area Agency on "Baudelaire meets Buster Keaton, 22 Aging. Warren Dexter is a photogra­ DEATH IN THE BALANCE: The where stares become words ... Lom­ pher who has done extensive photogra­ Debate over Capital Punishment bardo's straight-faced prose poses as a - phy of ancient artifacts and sites. new type of scientific writing seeking to Donald Hook and Lothar Kahn define the emotion of the brain and the Lexington Books, Lexington, Mass. , knowledge of the gut." In N ew York SIMPLE MINDS 1989, 131 pages, $17.95 hardcover Press, John Strausbaugh writes, "The Dan Lloyd, assistant professor ofphilosophy D eath in the Balance attempts to bring pieces are enigmatic and quietly surrea­ into focus the current debate in the U .S. listic, walking a very fine high wire MIT Press (Cambridge, Mass.), 1989, over the question of the death penalty. stretched between the everyday and a 266 pages, $25.00 hardcover The intensity of the debate has been re­ dryly sardonic personal folklore .. . A How does the brain embody the kindled by the execution ofTed Bundy, harmless-looking little reality-bomb set mind? Drawing on philosophy, neuro­ calls for the execution of drug kingpins, to implode quietly in the imagination." science, and artificial intelligence, Simple and the recent Supreme Court decision Lombardo is a freelance editor and Minds explores the construction of the permitting the execution of criminals as publishing consultant in the Boston mind from the matter of the brain. The young as 16 and those who are mentally area. book's primary focus is the centerpiece retarded. of cognitive science, the concept of rep­ Authors Hook and Kahn say that it is resentation. Lloyd's dialectical theory not surprising that the public is so di­ DAMN THE TORPEDOES: Naval of representation explains cognition in vided on this issue, because of its emo­ Incidents of the Civil War simple minds and offers provocative tional complexity and the many factors A. A. Hoehling '36 glimpses into language, consciousness, that must be considered: the finality of John F. Blair, Winston-Salem, N .C. , and reasoning in the complex human death as punishment, the possible execu­ 1989, 225 pages, $19.95 cloth mind. tion of innocent people, the rights of Lloyd asserts that an adequate theory victims vs. those of criminals, the differ­ While working as an editor for the of representation must explain how rep­ ence between a crime of passion and one Congressional Research Service of the resentations arise in purely physical sys­ committed in cold blood, the method of Library of Congress, author Hoehling tems and must account for familiar execution and the cost oflife imprison­ noticed a shortage of books about naval aspects of thought. Following a critique ment. Issues such as racial discrimina­ action during the Civil War. He had pre­ of two current models of representation tion, the killer's motive, and a desire for viously written several naval histories in cognition, he offers a new theory de­ revenge further complicate the debate. about World Wars I and II, and his three veloped through the imaginary evolu­ The authors examine the moral, phil­ books on the Civil War had been cen­ tion of simple information-processing osophical, legal and practical arguments tered on land activities in Richmond, systems. The theory is first used as for and against capital punishment and Atlanta, and Vicksburg. an analytic tool in a survey of connec- provide evidence for and against em- Since his naval history of World War The Reporter welcomes letters from its readers. Writers are encouraged to keep their letters brief and must include their names and addresses. Anonymous letters will not be I, The Great War At Sea, had remained in gan to ask questions. His study then published. The editor may abbreviate letters print for two decades, he decided on a showed: 1) only the surface of the prob­ for space reasons, or edit them for clarity. similar format, zeroing in on offbeat epi­ lem had been scratched; 2) there was not sodes during the Civil War, for this an extensive literature on the pohtical book. As the idea jelled and his research and economic aspects of the drug trade Six-Packs at 4 O'Clock began, he remembered snippets of infor­ in the '80s; and 3) as an $80-$150-billion mation and stories he had heard in the business, the drug trade had major polit­ past: of the Confederate naval officer ical and social ramifications. I t's been several decades since I was a who attempted to steal the ships tied up MacDonald writes in his preface to student at Trinity and things have in a Portland, Maine harbor; of a Missis­ Dancing on a Volcano that, three years changed a lot during this period. Obvi­ sippi steamboat captain whose boat was later, literature on the illicit drug trade ously, too, a graying parent looks at commandeered to take more than 100 remains underdeveloped, because of the things differently from an undergradu­ prostitutes out of Nashville, Tenn. , after dangers involved in collecting data, and ate or more recent alumnus. However, I its occupation by Union troops; and of because much of the data that does exist have been active in recruiting applicants early Confederate submarine experi­ is suspect. Nonetheless, in this book, he all these years and through them and mentation in the harbor of Charleston, examines the political, economic, and their parents have some insight into S.C. These stories, along with the Moni­ sociological structure of the Latin Amer­ Trinity's current environment. I would tor and the Merrimack, Admiral Farragut ican drug trade. The book places the add that the College means a lot to me. in Mobile Bay, the famous Confederate drug trade in historical perspective to raider Alabama, and several others, make get at the roots of current drug-related During the Alumni Leadership Con­ up Damn the Torpedoes. With his unique problems: large addict populations, high ference of 1988, Dean Cohn was one of emphasis on lesser-known incidents and crime rates, and the drain of govern­ several Trinity administrative, student their sometimes tragi-comic outcomes, ment revenues used to combat drug traf­ and alumni personnel who addressed Hoehling presents a fascinating over­ ficking. For this book MacDonald our group. All the speakers were natu­ view of two fighting forces on the brink interviewed people involved in all as­ rally upbeat and positive. Dean Cohn of modern naval warfare. pects of the trade, bringing the human was no exception except that she added 23 side to bear on this critical problem. a degree of candor by recognizing a In the second book, Mountain High, number of problems which others had - DANCING ON A V OLCANO: White Avalanche, MacDonald studies the typically been reluctant to bring up, and The Latin American Drug Trade impact of cocaine, the key dynamic of expressing the challenges they offered the drug trade. Although it is produced the College. Praeger, New York, 1988, 167 pages, in Bohvia, Colombia, and Peru, the in­ $12.95 In the Letters contained in the fall is­ fluence of the cocaine trade has spread to sue I saw not one supporting Dean other Andean states. Even countries on Cohn's "Six-Packs at 4 O'Clock" arti­ the periphery such as Panama have be­ cle. If said letters represent the extent of MOUNT AIN HIGH, WHITE come involved, as transit points and the reaction to her article then I am con­ AVALANCHE: Cocaine and Pow er money-laundering centers. Also consid­ cerned that the Trinity Community in the Andean States and Panama ered is the relationship between cocaine misses the whole point of Dean Cohn's The Washington Papers, Praeger, New and power, specifically, the political and remarks. While I cannot speak for her York, Published with The Center for economic power of those in the trade, and she certainly does not need me to Strategic and International Studies, and governments in the region. Final defend her, I interpret Dean Cohn's Washington, D.C., 1989, 153 pages chapters in the book offer pohcy options comments to be a searching inquiry of on contending with the problem. Both books by Scott B. MacDonald '78 attitudes and values on the Trinity cam­ Syndicated columnist Georgie Anne pus. I view what she says as an attempt These two books encompass work on Geyer said of this book: "Scott Mac­ to define values shaping the Trinity en­ this vital subject begun by MacDonald Donald's comprehensive and original in­ vironment so that the school can devise four years ago. At the time, his responsi­ sight into the modern drug trade that is programs to help shape a culture which bilities as unit manager of the Interna­ destroying the moral fiber of America is does not do away with parties but rather tional and Specialized Industry Group 'must' reading. For unless we know puts them in their proper perspective. and senior country risk analyst at Con­ where the rot starts, we will never know necticut National Bank necessitated his where it can finally end." I would suggest that the various Trin­ study of major economic and financial Currently with the office of the ity constituencies seriously ponder Dean trends in a number of Latin American Comptroller of the Currency, Dr. Scott Cohn's provocative statements and rec­ countries. By 1985, it had become clear B. MacDonald is also the author of Trin­ ognize that Trinity does have some real that the amount of capital involved in idad and Tobago: Democracy and Develop­ problems which if they go unchallenged the Latin American drug trade was ment in the Caribbean (1986) and coeditor can erode many of the values embodied huge, he writes. Curious about the im­ of a volume, The Caribbean a.fier Grenada in the school since its founding. pact of the drug trade, particularly with (1988). He has also published on the regard to the debt crisis, MacDonald be- drug issue in the SAIS Review. Richard G. Mecaskey '51 TWO DOCTORS' COMPASSIONATE MINISTRIES In Afghanistan, Life Intertwines

with War BY MARTHA A. DAVIDSON

Photos by Dr. Charles H. Cbs~n. Jr. "62. WHEN CHARLES H. CLAS­ SEN, JR. '62 went on vacation last year, his luggage included two bags full of surgical equipment. On his return trip a month later, the same bags were filled with hand­ woven Afghan rugs - souvenirs of the doctor's vacation spent working in Pakistan with refugees from the Soviet-Afghan war. The rugs tell a wordless tale of Af­ ghanistan's recent history. Along­ side traditional depictions of people and camels, the new rugs incorpo­ rate designs of helicopters, rifles and 24 missiles. - Classen, an orthopedic surgeon who practices in Kinston, N .C., has some fairly exotic vacations in his background - such as kayaking in the Grand Canyon- and a love of history. His desire to go to Pakistan was sparked when a friend mentioned that another local doctor had worked with Afghan refugees through the International Medical Corps, a Seattle-based organization. " If he liked it, it had to be good. The opportunity presented itself; I jumped on it," Classen said. He first went in 1988 and returned in 1989. "It's an incredible opportunity. If you want the ultimate liberal arts ex­ perience, go there." From North Carolina, Classen took a plane to New York's Ken­ nedy Airport. From there, he flew to Frankfurt, sat in the airport, flew to Pakistan where he spent the night, then flew on to Peshawar, a city surrounded by Afghan refugee camps. Peshawar is just outside the border of Afghanistan and about six hours from the Afghan capital of PEOPLE come to an outdoor Mghl'ln clinic for treatment. Kabul. Once there, Classen immersed himself in the ancient culture, and rapidly learned the importance of the word lnshal/ah in everyday exis­ tence. " No matter what happens­ lnshallah - God wills, he ex­ plained. "The first time you step off the plane into Pakistan, it's a real shocker. It's hard to put into words. There's high humidity . .. a certain smell ... dust blowing ... crowds of hundreds of people yelling . .. "Going down the street in Pe­ shawar, there are horses and cattle and vans and trucks, people riding oxen, people'in horse-drawn car­ riages, people drivingjapanese cars, people on bicycles. Every day I saw something incredible. " While ip Peshawar, Classen lived in the IMC's double-walled com­ pound on the outskirts of the city. He had three jobs: operating on both rebel fighters and civilians in­ jured in the conflict; screening pa­ tients to determine if they would be flown to hospitals in other nations 25 for treatment; and training men to WEAPONS of - be medics. After a nine-month train­ war are part of ing course, the medics returned to an Afghan rug's their own villages to provide medi­ design, above. cal care. Right, meat cut "It was said that the chance of for lunch is someone's dying from a war injury boiled in oil. in Afghanistan was higher than that of the wounded during the Civil War in the United States," Classen said. "The Russians have com-

CLASSEN'S travels took him to Peshawar in Pakistan. LEFT, an Afghan child with an infectious bone disease is brought to the clinic by another boy. Above, Mghans, young and old.

pletely bombed all medical facilities, As Classen worked and explored, do.n't have that kind of experience. driven off all the doctors -so es­ he was guided by a Pakistani doctor "These are a really hardy people sentially most of Afghanistan is who was his interpreter and friend. living in a mountainous region," he without any medicine. The main "He constantly tutored me in reli­ said. "The death rate by age five is 26 thrust of the International Medical gion, geography, politics and the one in three or one in five. They just Corps is to try to restore some sort history of the area. He drove me up keep enduring. - of medicine by training these med­ into the mountain passes and intro­ "They're so isolated and transpor­ ics." So far, the medic training pro­ duced me to people. It was a trip in tation is difficult. A strong central gram has been "very successful," a million. That's not an exaggera­ government has never been in place according to Classen. tion. I was lucky; a lot of the doctors and there's no education. After food, the Afghans I talked to want education." During his stay, Classen visited hospitals loosely controlled by vari­ ous Afghan political factions. In the city, makeshift hospitals were housed in old mansions. In the country, clinics were build in caves. He gave advice and helped run sur­ gery. "The facilities were extremely primitive because of the lack of any modern equipment ... You can't do everything you were trained to do; you don't have the equipment. You do what you can do. You use common sense." Classen wasn't a neophyte at pro­ viding medical care for casualties of war. During the Vietnam War, he had worked as an Army physician treating secondary casualties at Fort Meade from 1971 to 1975. "The pa­ tients were grateful and got better. I U.S. ARMY posters made of cloth are distributed to warn villagers about don't like people getting hurt - but the dangers of mines. In this one, a boy who finds a mine goes for help. it's rewarding to be able to help THIS AFGHAN girl, at left, lives in a refu­ As the guest of wealthy physi­ gee camp at Peshawar. Below, a medic ex­ cians, Classen also experienced the amines an Afghan child. luxurious side of living. "They roll out a linoleum and put piles of food on it. You sit on the floor cross­ legged and eat. They put out huge spreads, more than you could possi­ bly eat.'' He was fed lots of shish ke­ bab, but his favorite dish was a mixture of rice, raisins, orange peel and pine nuts. "At one dinner, I was the guest of honor. They put a chicken down in front of me and I didn't know what to do. An Afghan doctor who'd been in the U .S. leaned over and said to me: 'Just pick it up. A chicken here is the same as a chicken around the world.' " Classen said he was nervous the time he wound up admidst the gun­ fire of "a little local war" between

-27

TEA drinking is a traditional part of all social occasions and business transactions. Classen, far right, sits at an outdoor tea house. fections of the bone. These diseases Pakistani Sunis and Shiites. And, he are rampant but treatments available was alarmed when the American are minimal, he said. consulate received a threatening let­ them. " He's now a lieutenant colo­ "Everyone in the United States ter saying: "We know where you nel in the Army's inactive reserves. should go over there and then are. We're going to blow you up " Most Americans would die over they'll know who's poor," Classen with mines." "They read that letter there ... It's not for everybody," said. " It gives you a different per­ to us at lunch," Classen said. "We Classen said. ''I'm a very adaptable spective on what poverty is and drove in to town and went shop­ person. You have to be very flexible. how people deal with it. You get to ping. Nothing ever came of it . .. I dress like them and try to adapt to be part of it." They blew up a bomb in front of the their ways; that's the only way." Though Classen was allowed to consulate." In Peshawar, a canal that flows treat Afghan women, he was not al­ IMC's work didn't end when the from the mountains is an integral lowed to socialize with the opposite Soviets withdrew troops from Af­ part of daily life. "They use it for ev­ sex. Even when he dined at the ghanistan in 1989; they continue to erything: bathing, defecating, wash­ homes of Afghan friends, he never establish medical care for the coun­ ing vehicles," he said. It contributes glimpsed the women who had pre­ try's rural villagers. to the spread of infectious diseases, pared the meal; it was served by the "I plan to go back in May," said such as tuberculosis, malaria and in- men of the family. Classen. "lnshallah." The following article appeared in The Wall strength. His sister, Levina, is order stems from a genetic defect Street journal September 20, 1989. thrilled that her handwriting is legi­ that Dr. Morton's research shows to ble now. be common among the Amish. But Country Doctor Their father, a wiry man with a he believes that the illness can be long, graying beard, sits at the end treated and that, with early detec­ of the sofa and looks at his children. tion, brain damage and early death How a Physician "I think we would have lost Alvin, can be prevented. too, if it hadn't been for Dr. Mor­ Dr. Morton is also convinced that Solved Riddle of ton," he says. "I wish he had come glutaric aciduria is the leading cause 12 years sooner." of cerebral palsy among the Amish. Rare Disease In He believes his efforts to learn more Children of Amish Identifying the Disease about the disease could lead to fresh Dr. Morton, a bow-tied, 38-year­ insights about cerebral palsy among Holmes Morton Toiled Alone old pediatrician, has done extensive the general population. Till He Made a Diagnosis work with metabolic and neuro­ About 700,000 Americans have logical illnesses. He diagnosed the cerebral palsy. Every year, about He Links to Cerebral Palsy Miller children's disease as glutaric 3,500 more are affected. Until re­ aciduria, a devastating disorder that cently, it was mistakenly assumed But No Money for a Clinic strikes suddenly. that cerebral palsy resulted most of­ Children with glutaric aciduria ten from suffocation or trauma at By FRANK ALLEN are generally healthy for at leas~ six birth. But researchers now conclude Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JouRNAL months after birth. But when they that birth asphyxia doesn't explain develop childhood illnesses such as most cases of cerebral palsy and that LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa. - chicken pox, fever, infections or di­ the cause of at least 40% of all cases Holmes Morton is making another arrhea, they often lapse into a coma isn't known. house call at the farm of Amos and and die within 48 hours. Under the Dr. Morton's work is drawing at­ Susan Miller, an Old Order Amish stress of infection or diarrhea, the tention. "I have been watching his couple. child's body doesn't metabolize pro­ studies with great interest and admi­ Two barefoot boys with bowl­ tein normally. Highly toxic glutaric ration," says Victor McKusick, a shaped haircuts and homespun trou­ acid builds up rapidly in the blood­ Johns Hopkins geneticist who is rec­ sers smile quietly at him as they sit . stream and muscle tissue, attacking ognized for, among other things, 28 on a sofa beside their 10-year-old the liver and the nervous system, extensive research on the Amish. - sister, who cannot walk or speak. A including the brain. The condition "As far as I can see, this is a true younger boy, whose limbs are limp, of most children who survive the bill." rolls and flops on the floor. Their initial episode deteriorates as the pa­ Dr. Morton estimates that as mother irons clothes at the kitchen ralysis progresses and their muscles many as one in every seven Amish table. Fresh vegetables simmer on atrophy. living today in the county is a carrier the stove. of the defective gene that plagues Since 1977, Other Afflictions the Miller family. He explains that the Millers have The Amish have endured more one Amish child in 200 thus is likely watched five of affiictions than Job. Nearly all of the to be stricken with glutaric aciduria. their seven chil­ 15,000 Amish in Lancaster County In families like the Millers, in which dren suffer the are descendants of about 200 Swiss both parents are carriers (without ravages of a rare Anabaptist immigrants who settled having any symptoms), each child metabolic dis­ these fertile valleys beginning has a 25% chance of falling ill. ease. Two sons around 1720. Marriage outside their "This is literally an epidemic Levi and Sylvan, religious order is still strictly forbid­ for the Amish," Dr. Morton says. died from it. den. Many generations of inbreed­ "Among these people, the disease is The three af- ing have made the group susceptible 10 times more common than diabe­ Holmes Morton flicted children to hereditary disorders, including tes and 100 times more common who survived are crippled for life. dwarfism, mental retardation, con­ than childhood leukemia, but also Despite extensive testing, doctors at genital deafuess and cystic fibrosis, with much higher morbidity." Johns Hopkins University in Balti­ all of which have been studied by The Amish community here is a more and at the best hospitals in experts. But until now, glutaric aci­ gentle and devout group, mostly Philadelphia didn't make a correct duria among the Amish wasn't iden­ prosperous farmers and carpenters. diagnosis. tified or understood. To outsiders, they are known for But Dr. Morton did a year ago, Before Dr. Morton started visit­ driving horse-drawn plows and car­ and the surviving Miller children are ing Amish families in the summer of riages and for shunning electricity responding to his treatment, includ­ 1988, there were only eight docu­ and many other materialistic trap­ ing dietary adjustments. Alvin, the mented cases of this disease in medi­ pings. They are also widely admired four-year-old boy on the floor, is cal literature. In the past 12 months, for their mutual support in times of more alert and cheerful and gaining he has found 15 cases here. The dis- family crisis. Paying the Bill There was no response what­ plemented by the vitamin ribofla­ The toll of glutaric aciduria on soever." vin. During any illness, Dr. Morton Amish family life is profound. Danny Lapp, another Amish pa­ says, it is vital to prevent dehydra­ Many whose children are stricken tient of Dr. Morton, will be seven tion and buildup of toxic acid, so the have had to hire drivers to make 50 years old in October. He is a cheer­ children consume plenty of fluids or more trips to hospitals in Phila­ ful, bright child, but he is mute and and bicarbonate of soda. delphia and elsewhere. With dis­ totally disabled. He was well until A Harvard Medical School gradu­ abled children needing constant 14 months of age, when he suffered ate who is married and has three care, the farm and household be­ a severe bout of diarrhea and be­ children, Dr. Morton pays his come harder to manage. Medical came paralyzed. Dr. Morton last household bills by working many bills wipe out savings and often year made the diagnosis of glutaric nights in the newborn intensive-care force the sale ofland that has been in aciduria, after the family had piled unit at Bryn Mawr Hospital near his the family for two centuries. up medical bills of more than home in the Philadelphia suburbs. Four days after Amos Miller's $70,000. But at least once a week, after being youngest son, Alvin, became para­ "The people at the hospital told on duty all night at the hospital, he lyzed from the disease, he sold his me to just take him home and love drives his white Honda out to the dairy herd. There simply weren't him, there was nothing they could Amish farmlands for a day-long enough able-bodied family mem­ do," recalls Danny's mother, Ida. round ofhouse calls. He hasn't pre­ bers to manage the milking opera­ "But here he is . I don't know what sented any bills for his services. tion anymore. Elmer, the Millers' we would have done without the "Holmes has an extremely deep eldest son, doesn't have glutaric smile." feeling about doing good for peo­ aciduria, but his severe asthma and ple, " explains Harvey Levy, a neu­ allergy to hay prevent him from Constant Threats rologist who directs newborn heavy work in the barn. Now Danny spends much ofhis screening at Massachusetts General "You could see Alvin was go­ day strapped into a wheelchair, his Hospital and who helped supervise ing to be a farmer someday," Mr. feet flailing. He has learned to move Dr. Morton's residency at Chil­ Miller says. "As an infant, he used his big brown eyes up or down to dren's Hospital in Boston a few to crawl all the way from the house communicate yes or no. He has dif­ years ago. "He was considered by out to the barn to see what we were ficulty swallowing. Dr. Morton all of us to be one of the top resi­ doing. But now? Well, now I'm says pneumonia and malnutrition dents we have ever seen. His ability working as a carpenter." are constant threats to Danny's to synthesize everything and make a Mr. Miller's wife also is drained health. diagnosis was superb - astounding 29 . " by what the disease has done to the "Once a certain amount of dam­ 1n some cases. - family. In her diary, she writes age is done, you just don't get a Confident that glutaric aciduria is about how she felt after learning that whole lot back," he says. " An elec­ treatable, Dr. Morton wants to start a third son, Steve, had the disease: tric wheelchair, braces, surgeries, a clinic in the county. It would treat "For a while, life was a dark, dull medications, physical therapy, spe­ Amish children who already have ache and the future looked so moun­ cial education and the devoted care the disease, as well as Mennonites tainous that I wondered if God had by his family may make his life bet­ with maple syrup urine disease. It forgotten us." ter, or more bearable, but all of this also would screen and evaluate other is a poor substitute for screening and children so they might be spared the Death on the Road preventive care." same suffering. Her diary also describes the cold Dr. Morton is pushing hard to Solitary Struggle February day they drove the fam­ get such screening and prevention ily's horse-drawn carriage to the started. For the past year, he has So far, the clinic project has been home of Mr. Miller's parents for spent about 36 hours a week in Bal­ a solitary and frustrating struggle. Sunday dinner and the second son, timore at the Kennedy Institute at Although he was a finalist in compe­ Sylvan, died on the way: Johns Hopkins, doing laboratory tition earlier this year for a research "Going through Bartville, I analysis of urine specimens and data grant from the National Institutes of looked back and Sylvan was kicking he has collected from hundreds of Health, that organization and others a little and was covered. Half a mile Amish and Mennonite children. have turned down his funding re­ farther on, Amos looked back and (Many Mennonites, Anabaptists quests. One reason is that basic stud­ thought Sylvan is laying too flat and who are less cloistered than the Am­ ies of the molecular biology of hard against Levi. He stopped the ish, suffer from maple syrup urine diseases get much higher funding horse, for he thought it looks like disease, another inherited disorder priority than research about the ef­ something is wrong with Sylvan. that is detectable in newborns and fects and treatment of biochemical He picked Sylvan up and said, 'He that can be fatal within days.) disturbances. Moreover, big univer­ seems lifeless.' I quick handed baby sity hospitals are reluctant to take on Steve to Elmer and tried to find a Regimen for Patients clinical research involving long­ pulse in Sylvan but my hands were The Amish children he has identi­ term patient care for groups like the shaking, so I couldn't. So I tried to fied with high genetic risk have been Amish who lack conventional medi­ give mouth-to-mouth respiration. put on a protein-restricted diet sup- cal insurance. Since this article appeared in The Morton's patients, where he can use the ically ill children . This is not a huge Wall Street Journal, Holmes Morton mass spectrometer until the clinic is built. population - about 4,000 children, '79 has received a gratifyit1g response of Morton says the contributions result­ only about 15 births a week . There are a gifts of money and equipment from ing from the article are "a good start, a lot ofunique problems - an almost en­ readers. As of early November, 225 wonderfol start, and one I had never tirely uninsured population, for in­ readers from 37 states had sent contribu­ counted on ." However, he says, there is statJce. But, the problems are approach­ tions to the Clinic for Special Children, still much work to be done to make the able and diagnosable. On the scale that Inc., the non-profit corporation estab­ clinic self-supporting. What he has re­ I've tried to do it, it's a manageable pro} lished by Morton to manage the project. ceived is about one-fourth of what the ect. I ftlt that given the time and sup­ Two individuals sent checks for clinic will need for a three-year operating port, I could do something about it." $100,000. budget . He will be seeking support from Morton's journey to his career in med­ Hewlett-Packard Co. donated a gas charitable foundations and the Amish icine is a fascinating one. When he en­ chromatograph and mass spectrometer a11d Mennonite communities. Although tered Trinity in the fall of1975, medical valued at about $82,000, which will en­ approached by television news pro­ school was just "an interesting possibil­ able Morton to screen blood and urine grams, including "60 Minutes" atJd ity. " He enrolled in the IDP after serv­ samples of newborns, make early diag­ "20/20," as well as Life magazine, ing two stints in the Merchant Marine noses and assess the e.ffecti veness of ther­ Morton has declined interviews with and four years in the Navy. He had apies. A lumberyard owner in Maryland them to protect the privacy ofhis clients. dropped out of high school, finishing his pledged to supply all of the materials re­ A graduate of Trinity through the equivalency requirements while in the quired for construction ofthe clinic build­ College's Individualized Degree Pro­ service. During this time, he developed ing. An architect will donate his time to gram, Morton is modest about his work interests in neurology and cognition that 30 help design the facility, which will fea­ and disinclined toward accepting heroic he wanted to pursue. Through the IDP, - ture the same post-and-beam construction status. "I've really gone into an area of which o.ffers self-paced learning for older ' used in Amish and Mennonite barns. medicine where services are just not that undergraduates, Morton could focus on Lancaster Get~eral Hospital is donating available," he says. "I've tried to come these areas. After about 1 V'2 years of in­ office space at a health center located near up with a primary care system for chron- dependent study, he began to take bioi- Because his grant requests were fast. Two of ours were taking a nap. turned down, Dr. Morton is apply­ When they woke up, they were ogy courses to give him the background ing to local banks for a second mort­ helpless." he needed in neurophysiology. Becoming gage on his home to raise funds for a biology major, he completed the re­ the clinic. He says the only expen­ Implications Sink In quirements for medical school. His un­ sive piece of equipment he needs for She remembers the day Dr. Mor­ dergraduate career was stellar: he was the clinic is a mass spectrometer ton first told her about the disease. named a President's Fellow, elected to made by Hewlett-Packard Co. that " I shook when he told me," she Phi Beta Kappa, and graduated with can detect glutaric aciduria in urine says. "Finally, after 12 years, we got honors in biology and psychology. samples. It costs about $80,000. a diagnosis. I just never thought we "There's no question in my mind that Dr. Morton figures he could would get one. He told us, 'I believe the most important science education I cover his operating costs by charg­ your babies were all normal when had was at Trinity," he says. "The ing the Amish about $20 a sample they were born.' Then it sank in - way I think about science problems, for urine screening. The going rate what this could mean for the future. even how science problems overlap with for this kind of analysis at big hospi­ I mean the future of all the children, social problems: my orientation and re­ tals like Johns Hopkins is about $350 not just our children. It was a day I sponse come from Trinity, from studying to $400 a sample. will never forget. I cannot keep with professors like Bill Mace, Henry quiet about this. It is too im­ DePhillips and Frank Kirkpatrick." Community's Support portant." Morton will be speaking at the Col­ The Amish and Mennonite com­ Dr. Morton, who grew up in a lege on February 8, in lectures for biol­ munities are eager to do their part small town in West Virginia, says he ogy majors and for a general audience. for the clinic project. Some families pours his energy into the project For the science majors, his talk will focus have offered to donate land for the because he sees a need for better on the biochemical basis ofsudden death site. Several Amish carpenters, health-care delivery in rural areas. in youngsters and the current medical including Mr. Miller and his eldest "You will never be able to take care thinking on this family ofdisorders. His son, have volunteered to build the of these kids without home visits," public lectUTe will focus on glutaric aci­ facility if Dr. Morton can furnish he says. "That's just part of the cul­ duria as a disease: its unique problems, the lumber and materials. Still ture. I hope this project might teach including in health care delivery, and others promise to contribute their us something about how to organize implications for health care systems. time answering phones and filing this kind of care." For those interested in the clinic, paper work. Experts familiar with Dr. Mor­ the address is: The Clinic for Special "This kind of opportunity doesn't ton's effort say his plan for a clinic is 31 Children, Inc., 624 Brookside Ave­ come along that often," Dr. Morton a worthy idea, but they see risks, nue, St. Davids, PA, 19087. says. "Somehow this clinic has to including some to Dr. Morton's - get started. I am impatient enough own career. "He is doing something - Roberta Jenckes to make it happen. If I wait too that could be at the cutting edge for long, I will lose some of the confi­ developing a model for rural-care dence of the Amish community. I delivery," says Massachusetts Gen­ just hope I don't go bankrupt." eral's Dr. Levy. "But when you The families he is helping share make a move like this, your aca­ that hope. "The Amish are so demic and scientific career is jeop­ thankful for Dr. Morton," says ardized. It becomes very difficult to Grace Supplee, a home-service get grants, you lose access to the so­ nurse in Lancaster County who has phisticated laboratories, you sever worked with disabled Amish pa­ academic relationships. Holmes will tients for about nine years. "H e be, at best, on the very outer circle." comes to their homes in the middle That prospect doesn't seem to of the night if they call. I remember bother him. Heading home after a one time he drove a very sick girl to visit to the Lapps and the Millers, Du Pont Hospital in Delaware and Dr. Morton talks about his personal stayed with her. Most doctors motivation. "When you get out would never do something like there and see those kids and see that." those families, that is the force that The help Dr. Morton has given drives you," he says. "I think it's a Susan Miller and her family has per­ real privilege to be able to come out suaded her to take action. Sitting in here and do this. Ifl could figure out her kitchen, she tells him that more a way to do it for nothing, I would Amish families need information do it." about how to respond to the disease. ''I'm afraid when their kids get Reprinted by permission of The Wall Srreer sick, they yvon't be alarmed," she journal, © Dow Jones & Company, Inc., says. "The sickness comes on so 1989. All Rights Reserved. NESCAC offensive player of the year Terry McNamara '90 rises for one of his record 157 career receptions.

32 Football (7-1) The Bantams then traveled to of their own resulted in one score, Brunswick for a showdown with and a short touchdown pass after an - That the Bantam gridders fm­ Bowdoin, which had tied Trinity interception tied the score at 14-14 ished with another winning season the year before. The game was one early in the fourth quarter. Trinity (7-1) should come as little surprise; of the wildest shootouts in school responded with a 61-yard touch­ Head Coach Don Miller has built a history, with Trinity prevailing, down drive capped by a three-yard program which has been one of the 39-38 in the closing moments. The flip from Levine to Steve Redgate most consistent of the 1980s. But contest featured 77 points, 43 first '91, and TimJensen '90 added the this year's team was something spe­ downs, and 869 yards of total of­ point after for a 21-14 ad vantage. cial, forging its way into the record fense. Levine had a spectacular day, The Trinity defense forced quick books and showing resolve after an completing 24 of 46 passes for 315 punts after the next two Williams early-season setback, to finish the yards and three touchdowns. The possessions, but Ephs' quarterback first decade in school history with­ last of those was to Joe Brockmire Dan Dwyer managed to scramble out a losing football season. '92 with 1 :32 left in the game, bring­ his team to a score with 58 seconds The Bantams came into the sea­ ing Trinity to within 38-37. Miller remaining, and it looked like the son with the goal of going unde­ elected to go for the two-point con­ Bantams would have their second feated, an accomplishment not version and the win, and sopho­ game in as many weeks decided on a achieved since 1955. The team more fullback Kevin RisCassi's late two-point conversion. The opened with a thorough 30-0 drub­ option pass to McNamara worked Ephs swept to the left side and ap­ bing of Colby, a highly-touted team to perfection for the winning points. peared to have the angle, but end which went on to finish 4-4 and Next came the showdown at un­ Jeff Buzzi '90 and cornerback Rob claim the C-B-B title. The Bantams defeated Williams, which had gone Conklin '91 made a great saving defense held Colby to six ftrSt 6-1-1 and claimed the NESCAC ti­ tackle to preserve the lead. Williams' downs and 90 total yards on the day tle the year before. Williams boasted obvious onsides kick was the only in recording its first of two shutouts a powerful defense, but Trinity obstacle to victory, and it wasn't to on the year. Meanwhile the offense jumped out to an early 14-0 lead be. The Ephs somehow recovered was in high gear, as the combination with the help of a key blocked punt the kick, and a stunned Trinity de­ of quarterback Todd Levine '90 and by Mike Vandall '90. Trinity took fense watched as Dwyer coolly split end Terry McNamara '90 be­ that h:ad into the locker room, but marched the Ephs downfield and hit gan to get in sync for what would be in the third quarter the momentum tight end Matt Moynahan with a 30- a spectacular year for both. shifted to the hosts. A blocked punt yard bomb with 13 seconds left, and the Bantams had lost a 26-21 heart­ Women's Soccer (11-3, Bants fifth, right behind Tufts, breaker. Williams would go on to whom they faced on the road for the an 8-0 record, its first undefeated, E.C.A.C. Champions) second time in as many weeks. The untied season in school history. Lady Bantams were not expected to Though hopes of an undefeated do much in their ftrst-ever tourna­ season for Trinity were dashed, the Under Head Coach Maureen ment appearance, but they knew Bantams came on the last five weeks Pine, the women's soccer team com­ they were good enough - they had of the season with a vengeance. In pleted a remarkable three-year turn­ defeated #1 seed Connecticut Col­ succession they demolished Hamil­ around, going from a sub-.500 lege in New London, 4-1 earlier in ton (49-14), Bates (44- 7), Coast record her first year to the E. C. A. C. the season. Guard (28-7), Amherst (35-0) and Championship two seasons later. The Tufts contest was a thrilling, Wesleyan (37-7). They won their The remarkable drive to the title well-played soccer match all the last five games by an average mar­ was even more dramatic than the way. Tufts took an early 1-0 lead, gin of39-7, and ended up ranked team's rapid turnaround, as the but goals by Sally Thayer '92 and fourth in New England. The Coast Lady Bantams won three times on co-captain Kathy Ennis '90 gave Guard and Amherst wins were espe­ foreign fields by a single goal, twice Trinity a brieflead. Tufts came back cially sweet, as the Bantams got re­ in post-overtime shootouts. to tie it at 2-2, and the teams played venge for their two losses in 1988. The season started on a disap­ two scoreless overtimes. Banks did Against Hamilton, Levine overcame pointing but encouraging note, as well in net for the Lady Bantams, a shaky first half and ended up the Bants let a 1-0 lead slip away but Pine elected to go with Bolk for throwing ftve touchdowns, a feat he against perennial power Bowdoin, the penalty kicks. Each team is would repeat against Amherst. For losing 2-1 in double overtime. The awarded five kicks, and the team the year Levine tossed 23 touch­ team then ripped off five straight with more scores wins. Trinity down passes, eclipsing the old mark victories, as freshman Allison Bolk went to an early 2-0 lead on tallies of 19 held by Joe Shield '85. filled in for injured senior goal­ by Ennis and Thayer, but Tufts Numerous records were set this keeper Lisa Banks and recorded two came back to tie it, sending the year, by both the team and individ­ shutouts, while the offense began to match to a one-for-one kickoff. Pine uals. Wesleyan's -67 yards rushing roll. A poor outing produced a 2-1 sent Julie Edlund '93 in for Trinity's was the fewest ever allowed by a overtime loss at Clark, but the Lady sixth kick and she converted, giving Trinity team, and the offense's 173 Bants rebounded again to take three the Bantams the advantage. Bolk first downs set a new standard. of their last four, with the only loss then made a great save to give Kicker Jensen finished a remarkable a 1-0 decision at Tufts. Trinity the win and a semi-final 33 career with five college records: field Trinity would get a chance at re­ match-up against host Connecticut - goals in a game (3), kicking points venge, as the E.C.A.C. seeded the College. in a game (14), season (57) and ca­ reer (163), and career extra points (100). His . 980 PAT percentage (100-102) and 52 consecutive extra points are also New England marks. McNamara finished a brilliant career with a record-breaking performance against Wesleyan, as he broke the school's career reception record with the last score of the year, and then set a New England record (157) . Darren Toth '90 also finished with a flair, returning nine punts to set records for punt returns in a game (9), season (40) and career (101, also a New England mark). Toth was honored by the E. C. A. C. as a first-team selection as both a safety and return specialist, as were the other two tri-captains, of­ fensive guard Tom Schaefer '90 and defensive end Rob Sickinger '90. McNamara was named to the sec­ ond team. These four were also named to the All-NESCAC team, along with RisCassi, Levine and Jen­ Hey- we're number one! The women's soccer team capped a miraculous sen. MeN a mara was also named the playoff run with a 1-0 win over Bowdoin to claim the E.C.A.C. New league's offensive player of the year. England titte in the team's first appearance ever in the tournament. That game was just as tight as the Tufts game, as Thayer's goal early in the second half was matched by Conn's Ann Carberry, and the over­ times again failed to produce a goal. Bolk stopped two of the Camels' five attempts, while the Lady Bants had connected on three of four. Chris Lindsay '91 stepped up for the clinching kick and iced it, sending the ecstatic Bantams into the finals. The opponent would be, appropri­ ately, the Bowdoin Polar Bears, who had beaten Trinity on opening day. Bolk was again magnificent in the net, stopping 18 shots on the way to her fourth shutout of the year. Trin­ ity got the only goal of the game when Thayer took a nice lead pass from Lindsay and used her speed to beat the Bowdoin keeper for the de­ ciding tally at 5:29 of the second half. Several good saves by Bolk and effective ball controlled by stel­ 34 lar sweeper Lea Macaro '93 pre­ - served the victory, and the Lady Ban­ John Twichell '92 helped the men's soccer team achieve its best record in 21 tams had gone all the way in their years and tie the school record for victories. first trip ever to the E. C. A. C.'s. The team set or tied records for Bantams were gunning for bigger E.C.A.C. 's, despite the fact that • wins (11), shutouts (5), saves (174), game, seeking an E.C.A.C. bid. Trinity had a better record than and goals against average (. 935). Although they were denied post­ three of the teams participating. Bolk was tremendous in the net, re­ season play despite an 8-1-3 mark at The Bantams still had one more cording a 9-0 record, with an in­ selection time, the squad had an out­ goal to shoot for: Wesleyan. The credible 0.48 goals against average standing year, tying the school rec­ Cardinals had beaten Trinity six and a . 968 save percentage. Thayer ord for victories in a season and straight times, but the Bants were set a new record for points in a sea­ compiling the best record in 21 determined to stop the streak. After son (26) and tied the mark for goals seasons. missing several great opportunities (11) and made second-team All­ The Bantams started the season early in the action, Trinity finally New England. Ennis finished her by going undefeated their first five broke through when John Ramsey remarkable career with 29 goals and games, compiling a 3-0-2 mark. '91 scored on a neat feed from Matt 67 points, both second on the all­ But, ties with M.I.T. and W.P.I. in Evans '92late in the first half. Flashy time list. She was named first team games the Bants could have won forward Peter Alegi '92 secured the All-New England for her outstand­ would come back to haunt them. victory with another tally just min­ ing year (nine goals, four assists), Trinity got off to a great start utes later, and keeper Scott Zoltow­ and her leadership, along with co­ against Connecticut schools, with ski '91, a last-minute replacement captain Debbie Glew '90, the team victories over Coast Guard (2-1), for Mike Cavanaugh '90 (who M. V.P. the last two years, who will Quinnipiac (4-2) and Eastern Con­ broke his thumb in warmups), pre­ be sorely missed. necticut (3-1). A 3-1loss to na­ served the shutout. The Bantams tional power Williams slowed the finished the season with a disap­ march slightly, but the Bantams pointing 3-1 overtime loss at Am­ Men's Soccer (9-2-3) went 4-0-1 over their next five herst, but the season was a stirring contests. The committee elected success. Alegi (8-4-20), captain A year ago, the men's soccer team to go with Williams, Amherst, Michael Murphy '90 (6-3-15) and broke the .500 mark for the first Bridgewater State and North Ad­ Craig Hyland '91 (4-1-9) led the at­ time in 11 years. This season, the ams over Trinity in the four-team tack, while Cavanaugh and Zoltow- ski and sweeper Rosselli del Turco Things started wonderfully for A crazy 5-4 loss at Tufts set the '91 anchored a defense which re­ the Lady Bants, as they upset Bow­ team back a peg, but it responded corded five shutouts and kept the doin at home, 1-0 to start the year with three straight wins over West­ Bantams in every game. on a goal by co-captain Robin Silver ern Connecticut (4-0), Mt. Hol­ The loss of Murphy, Cavanaugh, '90. In that game, superb goalie yoke (4-2) and Amherst (2-1). A backs Peter Denious and Nick For­ Louise van der Does '91 made an he­ debilitating 5-0 Parents' Day loss to misano and supersub Dan Weisbach roic save on a direct penalty stroke Williams started a three game skid, will be felt, but Head Coach Robie with just 35 seconds left in the but the team bounced back again, Shults will have a strong core of vet­ game. Things continued to go well taking two of the last three and fin­ erans returning with the experience in the second game, a 2-1 overtime ishing on a positive note with a 1-0 of a near-playoff season under their win at Southern Connecticut. Al­ victory at Wesleyan. belts. though playing under the lights and Silver (7 goals, 5 assists) and on artificial turf for the first time, Hammond (7-2-9) were the big Field Hockey (7-5) the Lady Bantams showed compo­ guns on offense for the Lady Ban­ sure and guts at the end of the game. tams, while van der Does (2 .06 Coach Robin Sheppard recorded After Silver had given the team a GAA, .861 save%), link Mary Beth her 14th consecutive winning season 1-0 lead in the first half, the Lady Madarasz '90 and back Sarah Criss­ at the helm of the women's field Bants fought off numerous charges man '90 steadied the defense. Ham­ hockey team, an impressive feat and held on until the last minute of mond and several other freshmen, considering the youth of this year's play, when Southern notched a as well as a strong group of upper­ squad. Several key players were lost score on a breakaway to tie it, 1-1. classmen, will give Sheppard some­ for various reasons at the start of the In the second overtime, forward thing to build around next season, year, and the team had to make do Sarah Hammond '93 cleaned up a as she guns for her 15th straight with many younger players in the rebound and deposited it in the net wmrung season. lineup. for the emotional 2-1 win.

-35

Mary Beth Madarasz '90 (right) and Sarah Ferrucci '92 defend the Trinity goal. The Lady Bantams enjoyed their 14th straight winning season. Women's Tennis (7-4) FALL SCOREBOARD The Trinity College women's tennis team finished the season in spectacular fashion, capturing its last FOOTBALL (7-1) Conn. College 1-4 six matches of the year to re-estab­ Keene St. 3-2 30-0 Colby Colby 1-2 lish itself as one of the top teams in 39-38 Bowdoin Wesleyan 1-0 New England. That status was rein­ Williams 21-26 forced at the annual New England 49-14 Hamilton W-TENNIS (7-4) Championships, where the Lady Bates 44-7 Bantams placed fifth out of22 Coast Guard 28-7 UHartford 4-5 teams. Amherst 35-0 Amherst 4-5 Head Coach Wendy Bartlett en­ Wesleyan 37-7 Conn. College 5-1 tered her sixth year having suffered Tufts 4-5 consecutive 3-8 seasons with M-SOCCER (9-2-3) UConn 3-6 Wellesley 6-3 young, inexperienced squads. This 2-1 Coast Guard Smith 8-1 M.I.T. 2-2 OT year promised to be different, how­ Williams 5-4 4-2 ever, as the entire team returned Quinnipiac Vassar 8-1 along with several talented new­ W.P.I. 2-2 OT Wesleyan 6-3 comers. E. Connecticut 3-1 Mt. Holyoke 9-0 Things started slowly, as the Williams 1-3 N. Englands 5th Lady Bantams got off to a 1-4 start, Tufts 1-0 Conn. College 3-2 M-XCOUNTRY which included three losses by Nichols 7-0 scores of S-4. T he biggest problem W.N.E.C. 1-0 11-9 36 was doubles; Trinity had a 3- 9 dou­ Clark 1-1 OT - bles record in those four losses, and A.I.C. 5-0 W-XCOUNTRY lost all four during doubles play. Wesleyan 2-0 Bartlett focused on doubles in prac­ Amherst 1-3 OT 14-4 tice, and her units began to gel. The VOLLEYBALL (10-12) excellent play of the three doubles W-SOCCER (11-3) teams was the major difference in Bowdoin 1-2 OT Williams 0-2 the second half of the season, as the W.N.E.C. 5-0 Clark 2-1 pairs rolled to a 16-2 record down Amherst 6-1 Wesleyan 0-3 the stretch to spark the six-match Conn. College 4-1 Conn. College 3-1 1-3 winning streak. Smith 2-0 Smith Amherst 1-3 The Lady Bants played solid sin­ Williams 2-1 Clark 1-2 OT A . Magnus 2-0 gles as well . Bo Hewitt '93 stepped Conn. College 1-2 right in to the #1 spot and did a fine Manhattan ville 6-0 Mt. Holyoke 2-1 A. Magnus 3-0 job, finishing with a 5-6 mark Tufts 0-1 Tufts 0-2 against the top players in N ew Eng­ Wesleyan 6-0 Mt. Holyoke 2-1 land. Heather Watkins '91 spent Tufts* 3-2 OT Manhattanville 2-1 most of the year at # 2, and finished Conn. Coli.** 2-lOT Albany St. 2-0 with a 6-5 record. The solid play of Bowdoin*** 1-0 St. Aquinas 1-2 Hewitt and Watkins allowed the Keuka 0-2 middle of the lineup to flourish, and FIELD HOCKEY (7-5) Coast Guard 2-0 Wesleyan 2-0 this is where Trinity used its depth Bowdoin 1-0 Williams 0-2 to overpower its opponents. s.c.s.u. 2-lOT Bard 2-0 When junior co-captain Anne Tufts 4-5 Union 1-2 Nicholson was lost for the season af­ w.c.s.u. 4-0 Wesleyan 1-2 ter the second match with a back in­ Mt. Holyoke 4-2 Quinnipiac 0-3 jury, the rest of the squad took up Amherst 2-1 * - E.C.A.C. 1st Round the slack. Laura Hubbard '93 moved Williams 0-5 ** - E.C.A.C. Semis from # 6 to # 3 and had a remarkable Smith 1-3 *** - E.C.A.C. Finals season, finishing at 8-3. Former # 1 players Maria Nevares (8-3) and Courtney Geelan (8-3) gave Trinity Cross Country perience and showing flashes ofbril­ a solid 1-2 punch at the #4 and #5 liance. Led by senior co-captains spots, and co-captain Christine Beth Clifford and Emily Knack and Laraway '90 (5-l) and Catherine Both the men's (11-9) and outside hitter Gracie Russell '91, the Macauley '90 (3-0) filled in wonder­ women's (14-4) cross country Lady Bantams showed at times that fully at #6. teams finished with winning records they belonged among the best in The doubles teams of Hewitt and under first year coach Dave Barry, New England. Watkins (8-2), Nevares and Hub­ and are building on a strong nucleus The Lady Bantams started with bard (4-5) and Geelan and Macauley for the future. a split at home, dropping a two­ (7-3) took a while to get going, but Both teams started at the Vassar gamer to Williams and scrapping for once they did, the team rolled. Hub­ Invitational, where the men came in a 2-1 win over Clark, taking the last bard and Nevares finished especially second of nine teams and the game, 16-14. A thorough drubbing strong, as both made it to the finals women were first of eight. The at the hands ofWesleyan was dis­ at the New Englands in singles, and women placed three runners in the couraging, but the Lady Bants then teamed to make another trip to top five: Candace Mulready '90, would get a chance at revenge later the finals in doubles. Their fine play Carrie Pike '93 and Claire Summers in the season on their home court. A sparked Trinity to a fifth-place fin­ '92. For the men, team leader Mike tight three-set win over Connecticut ish, behind only Tufts, Williams, Joyce '90 (seventh), Mike Fagan '90 College got the Bants back to . 500, Amherst and Brandeis (by one (11th) and co-captain Bruce Corbett but consecutive losses to Smith and point). Trinity beat Williams and '90 (16th) led the Bantams to a 7-1 Amherst dropped them back. At the lost to Tufts and Amherst by S-4 mark in the opener. Things did not tournament, scores during its doubles doldrums go as well at the Williams Invita­ the Lady Bants trounced Albertus during the regular season. tional against stiffer competition, as Magnus but lost a tough 15-13, the men placed 15th of22 teams, the 5-15, 13-15 decision to the Camels women lOth. in the finals. The next week at the Amherst In­ A 3-0 win over Albertus Magnus vitational, the women ran their best (including a 15-0 whitewash) and a meet of the year, downing four split with Tufts and Mt. Holyoke teams to take the title. Pike and left the Lady Bants hovering around Mulready finished 1-2 in the race, as .500. They finally broke through the Lady Bantams improved their with consecutive wins over Manhat­ record to 11-0. The men finished tanville and Albany State in the Vas­ 37 third of four teams, falling to strong sar Tourney, but fell back with squads from Amherst and Westfield - defeats to St. Thomas Aquinas and State. A quad-meet at Williams Keuka. yielded the women a second-place A big home meet against Coast fmish, while the men again took Guard and Wesleyan would prove third in the final tuneup before the to be the highlight of the season, as NESCACs. the Lady Bantams had all the parts Both teams, beset by injury, fared clicking as they defeated their two worse than hoped at the league keen in-state rivals. Trinity first meet, as each finished in 1Oth place. took on Coast Guard, and rode the A loss to W . P. I., a third-place finish steady setting ofKnack and Rus­ in a five-way meet and a loss to sell's powerful kills to a 15-13, Wesleyan left the men at 11-9, while 15-10 victory. In the nightcap, the the women closed in similar fashion Bantams took a tight 15-12 victory to finish at 14-4. in the first game from the highly In the New England Champion­ ranked Cardinals. The second game ships which concluded the season, saw Wesleyanjump out to a 6-1 the men placed 24th of 31 teams, lead, but Trinity stormed back and with Joyce again leading the way took control of the match, winning with a time of27:52. Pike was the 15-12 to finish the night, 2-0, with­ top woman for the Bantams, cap­ out losing a single game. turing 20th place to lead Trinity to A 1-3 effort at the Williams invi­ 21st place out of27 teams. tational and a straight-set loss to Quinnipiac ended the season, but the memories of the stirring win Volleyball (10 -12) over Wesleyan are what lingers. The Candace Mulready '90 was one of loss of two co-captains hurts, but the key members of Trinity's 14-4 The women's volleyball team was coaches Stan Ogrodnik and Kirk Pe­ women's cross country team under on a roller-coaster ride all season ters will have Russell and a group of first-year coach Dave Barry '85. long, battling a lack of depth and ex- solid veterans returning next season. IV'-lttJi .

38 CLA~OT. s - .~ ~...... ,.... .

1980 PATRICK F1NN and Carol Martinotti, 1971 Vital Statistics LEONIE HERSHFlELD and Jay S. Sept. 30, 1989 G. WILLIAM and Patricia Michel Kramer, October, 1989 MARY ELLEN FOY and MARK R. HA­ SCHWERT, son, Andrew Patrick, MICHAEL C. HUEBSCH and Suzanne MEL, June 17,1989 Feb. 20, 1989 d'H. Hooper, Sept. 23, 1989 DAPHNE B. VANDENHOECK and Mi­ PAUL THOMAS LoBELLO and Angela chael E. Byrne, Oct. 7, 1989 1975 M. Mancuso, Sept. 22, 1989 Mr. and Mrs. . PETER A. MINDNICH, 1985-1986 daughter, Antonia (Toni) Marie, May ENGAGEMENTS 1981 CRAIG M. TATERONIS and KATHRYN 25, 1989 LINDA C. BUCHlN and Michael H. Sul­ R. BURKE, Sept. 8, 1989 1982 livan,Aug.26, 1989 1976 Chaim Dworkin and LINDA CHERKAS, MARTHA J. BRACKENRIDGE and JULIE JOHNSON and William H. Doo­ 1986 son, Akiva Meir, April 5, 1989 Austin B. Sayre III nan, Aug. 12, 1989 VERNON MEYER, JR. and LISA PHIL­ LIPS, Sept. 16, 1989 1986 1976-1977 CHRISTINE KELLEHER and STEVEN 1983 1987 MICHAEL ROY and GAIL BOGOSSIAN, ANDREA MOONEY and Jonathan Lea­ OKUN ANDREW D. FILLER and Jennifer A. daughter, Pamela Alice Roy, June 22, vitt, April, 1989 Ventres, May 28, 1989 1989 1987 M. ELIZABETH PRUETT and John K. STEVEN K. GERBER and Sue Ellen Herbert III, Aug. 26, 1989 Masters 1977 Steiger John and LAURIE BLAIR ERNST, LIZ KRIKORIAN and Nick Aynilian 1983-1985 1984 daughter, Rebecca Adams, Aug. 22, CARY LYFORD and JOHN SELF JAMES B. FREDERICK and LETITIA KENNETH D. JOHNSON and Awilda 1988 H. BARROLL, Sept. 30, 1989 Aponte, April 1, 1989 JAMIE KAPTEYN and KIRSTEN KIM­ 1978 BALL, May 20, 1989 Davis and NANCY GUNNER HEUS. WEDDINGS SLER, daughter, Catherine Frances, June 2, 1989 1973 1984 BffiTHS PETER T. MOTT and Janet Banks-Mott, CHASE TWICHELL and Russell Banks, GWEN A. OSTERHOUT and Michael J . daughter, Emily Lynne, May 8, 1989 August 25, 1989 Laprade,Dec. 23, 1988 1963 1980 1979 1985 WILLIAM and Martha P. HOWLAND, Tom and CYNTHIA ROLPH BALLAN­ WILLIAM FORNSHELL and Mary Jo CHRIS CASKIN and Evelyn Pagan, Oct. son, John Richmond Pitman How­ TYNE, son, Trevor Thomas, Feb. 19, Budesa, Sept. 23, 1989 14, 1989 land, Aug. 23, 1989 1989 YEARBOOK pictures and a letter trace Bent's history with Trinity.

BENT'S COLLEGE MEMORIES GO BACK 75 YEARS -39 ven though it's been three-quar­ he worked on reunion committees matter and told us there was no re­ E ters of a century since Ralph H. and served on the Board of Fellows. cord of any other marriage having Bent '15 graduated from Trinity, his Born Aug. 3, 1894 in New York been performed on the campus," interest in the College's goings-on City, Bent entered Trinity in 1911. Bent recalled in a letter to the alumni has not waned. As a student, he played on the base­ magazine. The couple's marriage "I am now 95 years old and in ball squad and was a cheerleader. He lasted for more than four decades - good health and enjoying life . . . As sang in the Glee Club and the College until Flora's death in 1959. far as I know, I am the oldest remain­ Choir, and was a member of the In 1917, Bent began· teaching at ing member of my class," Bent Mandolin Club. He joined the Alpha Mohegan Lake School in New York; wrote to the alumni office last No­ Chi Rho fraternity. In his yearbook, this launched his 43-year career as an vember. His letter was inspired by a he was designated "class prophet." educator. He served as the first presi­ Trinity Reporter article describing Re­ After graduation, Bent remained dent of the Admissions Officers As­ union '89. "I would like to add that I in Hartford and worked in the insur­ sociation of Eastern Private Boarding had attended all alumni reunions for ance field while studying for his Schools and, for 17 years, was dean 55 years. I also attended Trinity­ M.A. at Trinity, which he earned in of admissions at Riverdale Country Wesleyan football games held at 1917. School in New York. Trinity," noted Trinity's oldest A 1985 Trinity Reporter article During Bent's time at Riverdale, alumnus, who lives in Delray Beach, about the restoration of Seabury he once typed a friendly correction to Fla. 9-17, formerly the College Chapel, Trinity's alumni office: "Please note Named "permanent secretary of triggered another special memory for that for some time now your office the Class of 1915," Bent has re­ Bent, who had lived in Seabury as a has been addressing me at the River­ mained ever faithful to that role. His student. "On June 17, 1918, Flora dale Country Club School. There file in the alumni office is thick with Kendall and I were married on Com­ may be an aspect of truth in this, but correspondence from the past 75 mencement day by President Luther we are keeping it secret at the present years. Some of his missives recorded at 9 a.m. Although it was to be a time. As ever thine, Ralph H . Bent." changes in his life or offered news quiet affair, Dr. Luther gave out the In 1959, Bent retired from River­ about his classmates. Bent was more news and the old chapel was filled dale Country School and, in 1965, he than the class scribe: over the years, - all men. He had looked into the moved to Florida. MARSHALL N., JR. and Jane Holt DUD­ Four more to go with Amherst looming spring and our other three daughters Sherry, himself, is in fund raising LEY, daughter, Morgan Elizabeth, as a real toughie ahead. visited us in West Hartford at one time right there, being chairman of the li­ June 1, 1989 Had a real nice get together with or another this summer. We are now up brary fund drive which seeks $250,000 Nathaniel and LYNN VEAZEY ROCK­ ANDY FORRESTER and his Annabelle to seven grandchildren. We also at­ for a new addition. He is still on the WELL, daughter, Sarah Lottise, Sept. recently, and am happy to report that tended the inauguration of our new board of trustees of the Cape Cod Mu­ 17, 1989 both seemed to be fine. Trin president, Tom Gerety. It was a seum of Natural History, and chairman Hari and SUSAN V!AMYNCK-POLAN­ No word or news from other class­ most impressive ceremony and we of the personnel committee; but he is SKY, son, Daniel Albert Polansky, mates but you can bet that anything were highly pleased with him. Trinity is starting to relieve himself of some vol­ March 31, 1989 you send in will be thankfully received in good hands, but we will also miss unteer jobs: the board of the Uf\ited and passed on to the few remaining JIM ENGLISH H '89. We still play golf if Way and the finance committee of the 1981 classmates. that is what you might cali it. I am just Elder Services of Cape Cod and the Is­ Mr. and Mrs. PAUL HOUGH, daughter, Class Agent: finishing a stint on the governing board lands. Every town should have as in­ Sandra Shoemaker, April 11, 1989 Roger W. Hartt of the Hartford Golf Club. dustrious a citizen as that. That is the Class news as I know it. When I wrote JACK HANNA that I 1982 What I need is more items from you am slowed down by a recent hernio­ WILLIAM and Vivian SCHAUFLER, Julius Smith, D.M.D. that you can share with your class­ tomy - like yard work, house mainte­ daughter, Amanda, May 23, 1989 141 Mohawk Dr. mates. They are interested so please nance, walking, swimming at the Y - West Han£ord, Conn. send some along. he replied that he has to pop antacid 06117 1983 Class Agent: tablets at times, but is happy to live WILLIAM and Diane COLBY, son, Wil­ John E. Kelly with that and still be able to e[\joy jog­ liam Ryan, June 20, 1989 A wonderful letter from our salutato­ ging, skiing, and figure skating. I guess rian NATE GLASSMAN who, you may he has more fun than most. To quote 1986 remember, was hoisted up the campus him, "Still laboring in tbe vineyards of Thomas P., Jr. and CLAlRE SLAUGH­ tree on St. Patrick's Day Massacre. He William H. Walker love after more than 40 years as an TER JOYCE, son, Thomas Patrick Ill, and Daye now live in South Florida, of­ 97 West Broad St. English professor - now 'emeritus' Hopewell, N.J. 08525 Sept. 30, 1989 ten traveling to Jacksonville to see and part-time. It must be in the blood." their only granddaughter, a future Miss II I just know that some of you fellows are doing interesting things. Won't you America. Another first for them is the A note from ART HAZENBUSH re­ let me know about them so that I can recent marriage of their 46-year-old ported that he and Mary took a trip tell our classmates. son. across Canada by train - then toured James A. Calano YOUR SECRETARY and Lil will at­ Alaska on a cruise. They will spend the Class Agent: 15 White St. tempt a mini-reunion with the Glass­ winter in Florida again. Dr. John G. Hanna ffan£ord,Conn.06114 mans and any other Trinity grads in the The EIGENBAUERs took a trip to area this winter. At this writing the gor­ Austria this past summer and his de­ geous colors on campus match any­ Michael J . Scent! tailed account is not in yet. 226Amherst Uur beloved DOC LUKE CELEN­ thing tbe Mohawk Trail, with its After four hospitalizations extending TANO passed away Sept. 1 (see In brilliant hues, can present. Wethersfield, Conn. into June, my health problems have 06109 Memory). YOUR SECRETARY first Your classmates would appreciate been solved. Helen and I spent two heard of it while watching a Yankee any news you can send. weeks in New Hampshire in August game on TV that day. The sportscasters Class Agent: and just returned from a week in South l:IILL HULL received a letter from of that game were discussing the death Nathaniel B. Abbott Carolina visiting Brother LEW '38 and JIM DONOHUE's daughter, Irene Jurc­ of Baseball Commissioner and former Ruth. zyk, notifying him of Jim's death on Yale President Bart Giamatti, which oc­ Aug. 20 (see In Memory). Jim suffered 40 curred that very day, when one of them from congestive heart failure. He was a Charles A. Tucker, M.D. also noted the passing of another great 7 Wintergreen Ln. great lover of jazz. So much so, that a - lover of baseball, Doctor Luca Celen­ West Han£ord, Conn. Robert M. Christensen recording of Louis Armstrong's "What tano. Luke was highly regarded in his 06II7 66 Centerwood Rd. a Wonderful World" was played at his profession, a generous philanthropist Newington, CT 06111 funeral mass. I can remember that Jim and advocate of proper education for was always ready to impart his humor children. For a splendid resume on Phyllis Mason will be in Captiva, Fla. at all times. Luke's accomplishments, please refer for a good part of the winter where SHERRY RAYMOND, only a one-year Bill Hull remains busy as secretary of to page 45 of the 1989 summer issue of shelling (of which she is the local au­ member of the Class, has asked for his cooperative at Siesta Key, Fla. He the Trinity Reporter. thority) is a top priority among many help in keeping his directory of the and Ruth are still square dancing and other pursuits. Class of '36 up to date. Sherry has a will be dancing in Jacksonville in mid­ Class Agent: ANDY ONDERDONK had a mild very active interest in Trinity and the Sereno B. Gammell October. He will try to contact CARL heart attack; we are pleased to report best list of our alumni that I know of. I LINDELL. that he is doing well and is back at his could not help him, but you might. If FRED CALDERWOOD, Madison, you do encounter or have encountered Winthrop H. Segur job of treasurer of Trinity Church in Conn. died Sept. 13 (see In Memory). Park Ridge, Apt. 516 Hartford along with many other volun­ a Class member, send me a note about He is survived by his wife, Carol, a son, 1320 Berlin Tpk.e. teer duties. We hope that he slows the meeting and anything you might David, of Dumfries, Va., and a daughter, Wethersfield, Conn. down a bit, but he probably will not. have heard that will give us current in­ Faith Amoroso, of Randolph, NJ. Fred 06109 The BRYANT GREENs in Vera formation: family, address, how the en­ had retired in 1978 as a second vice Beach were worried about Hurricane counter came about, etc. president from Connecticut General When YOUR SECRETARY wrote his Hugo but were spared any damage. Sherry, who sees the MOREs occa­ Life Insurance Co. where he had been Class notes for the autumn issue of the BILL HARING had a closer call and sionally, mentioned that they had spent employed for over 40 years. Our sym­ Reporter last July, the main topic was Hilton Head was. evacuated. He says four months in Florida and also made a pathy is extended to his family. what kind of a football team would that he had a terrible feeling when he trip to Williamsburg. BERT has been Coach Don Miller be able to put to­ left his house with the thought that he feeling fairly well of late, as the travels Class Agent: gether for the 1989 season. At this might never see it standing again but would suggest. William G. Hull point, mid-season, the answer is good! Hilton Head was spared and damage The Raymonds expected to be in As a matter of fact, the only disap­ that occurred was from winds that Maine in October and planned to see pointment to date is that WRTC (89.3) were not much greater than the more JACK and lnga HANNA in Portland. I G. Robert Schreck was unable to cover the first two usual coastal storms. He had lunch re­ rather expect that Sherry and Jack will 328 Round Cove Rd. games. However it was on the air for cently with his daughter-in-law, Judy try to think of a way to stimulate you Chatham, Mass. 02633 the Williams and Hamilton games and (husband JON '64 is also Trinity), ED Class members to tell us of yourselves most probably will be able to complete CRAlG, and his wife, Jane, in Kenosha. and otherwise show your interest in the season. For us stay-at-homes it is If you do not know where that is, it Trin and the Class. Sherry has been Thirty-two members of the Class re­ really great fun to tune in and e[\joy the proves that the geography education in seeing two former members of the turned to Hartford last June to cele­ play-by-play sportcast. A mid-season this country is not of the highest caliber Trinity staff at the weekly meetings of brate our 50th Reunion. We were record of 3-1 is certainly evidence of as has been reported elsewhere. the Orleans Coffee Club: Ted Mauch, particularly pleased to have Shirley another good club representing the JOHN KELLY is still having some professor of religion, and Gardiner Yates, widow of BILL YATES, and their Blue and Gold, especially when one trouble with ear noises which limits his Bridge, admissions officer. He also son join us. It was a great occasion and takes into consideration that the Wil­ activity somewhat. mentioned the annual Trinity outing at we are all scheduling and looking for­ liams "W" was accomplished with but Ruthie and I visited a daughter and Phyllis Mason's home, which was at­ ward to our 55th. 13 seconds remaining in the game! her family in Aberdeen, Scotland this tended by about 25 alumni. The inauguration of new president, Tom Gerety, was a great and memora­ He was confined to a wheelchair for " ... Our Class did not make either charged from the USAAF, I briefly ble event at Trin which at least three the rest of the summer and is still on its dollar or participation Alumni Fund "studied" French and Gennan in that Class members and their ladies at­ crutches. "But," he says, " 'sweet are goals. We raised 12 big ones, with international watering place. Must re­ tended, namely Class President JACK the uses of adversity,' for I was able to about 60 percent of the Class contribut­ visit the Cote D'Argent one of these WILCOX and Helen, the ED SMITHs finish the book I was writing." ing. Part of it is my fault: I spent most of days.) and DICK LEGGE'ITs. The event was PREPARE FOR YOUR 50TH May in France doing the three Cs: cha­ Speaking of the forties, did you see so large we may have missed other REUNION! teaux, cathedrals, and caves (pas de the recently published photo of Presi­ Class members present and if so, our vin, pre-historique!). And if a sales­ dent Tom Gerety regaling students Class Agent: man does not make the calls, he does apology. Stephen M. Riley, Esq. from the window of what was Remsen not write the orders. Wait 'till next In other news, Jack and Helen Wil­ Reunion Chairs: Ogilby's old office? Nostalgic - and cox traveled to Hertford, England with year, I tell our guardian angel on the brought back memories. My last en­ Walter E. Borin Alumni Fund staff, JULIANA GARRO a group of Hartford Rotarians (Jack is a Alvin C. Hopkins counter with "Prexy" was a chance one very active Rotarian) to celebrate their '86 (and a Phi Beta Kappa!). at the Hartford rail station in 1943 sister city Hertford's 50th anniversary In ceremonies on the Fourth of July when I was off for my first assignment in the Rotary. Jack and Helen were weekend billed as a 'back-yard bash,' as a new 2nd lieutenant (following too overnight guests of Hertford Rotarians. Frank A. Kelly, Jr. friends and neighbors celebrated my many months as a private). Prexy was They arranged a tour bus and had a 21 Forest Dr. 70ili birthday. One of the friends was always an opportunist. His final words Hungarian driver, nicknamed by them Ne~gton,Conn.06111 MATT BIRMINGHAM, who came with to me paraphrase out as "I want to see "Atilla the Hun," who provided the not one but two shopping bags filled those gold bars turn to silver soon!" commentary and humor for the group. with firecrackers, the setting off of I'm short of 1942 news this time. Also in September, BOB and Carolyn YOUR SECRETARY attended the in­ which delighted the brats in atten­ Please, fellows, take a hint and write, SCHRECK tripped to the Near East via auguration of Tom Gerety as president dance, less so some of the shell­ phone or fax (24 hours). The answering Royal Viking cruise ship to the Black of Trinity College. Since I didn't see any shocked guests. 'BUD' TIBBALS '40 machine generally works, should we be Sea and Mediterranean nations of classmates there I guess I can consider was there. With 'Bud,' me, Matt, and my away. myself the official representative of the son WOOLSEY '78, we sang a most me­ Greece, Turkey and the Soviet Union. Class Agent: Class of 1941, although without the col­ lodious 'Neath the Mapl£s of our Dear This was a most el\joyable cultural and Charles F. Johnson II historical visit to the ancient ruins of orful robes worn by other delegates. Old Trinity.'" Eurasia dating back to 3000 years B.C. One of the first acts of the President The threescore and ten age now en­ A request to all: now is the time to was to move his office to the quarters joyed by Charley and many '42ers re­ John L. Bonee, Esq. tell our Class members interesting and on the first floor of Williams Memorial minds me that most of us have had to from whose window Remsen Ogilby One State St. important news of YOU. It occurs to me mellow considerably with the ~ears Hartford, Conn. 06103 that aside from the usual important (who will always be Trinity's president just in order to make it this far! In past personal happenings in your life, the for our generation) kept in touch with reports I've listed several doing church, terrible disasters of Hurricane Hugo in the College world. counseling or other good works. May I HARRY TAMONEY was the guest of the Carolinas and more recently the My wife and I were at the annual thus include the following Limerick* honor at a luncheon given by his earthquake in the San Fran area may Cape Cod summer picnic, which was from our Class's unchallenged(?) poet brother, TOM '42, attended by many of have affected your lifestyles. In any held at Phyllis Mason's house in Chat­ laureate: our fellow alumni, including DON event, please let us hear from you be­ ham. Also in attendance were JOE and There was a young fellow from VIERING, BOB NICHOLS and MARTY fore our next Trin Reporter goes to Rosemary RUSSO. Joe recently retired Trinity WOOD of the Class of 1942, ARTHUR press. Contact JERRY HANSEN '51, from the board of directors of Red Who took the square root of infinity. FAY and DREW MILLIGAN of the Class Jack, Mike, Vic, me or anyone with Cross and Blue Shield. Although no The number of digits of 1945, and YOUR SECRETARY. Harry your news. In the interim, accept our longer in practice, he keeps up with Gave him the fidgets. is a retired Hartford physician and sur­ best for a happy winter and holiday medical literature. He now has five He dropped math and took up di­ geon who specialized in oncology. He season. grandchildren. The Russo family now vinity. lives with his wife, Patty, during the 41 boasts two MBAs, one lawyer and one Poet's note: "* Yes, it is 'Limerick' not cooler months in Indian River Shores Class Agent: engineer. They have 12 college degrees 'limerick' because the art form is asso­ (Vero Beach), Fla., and during warmer - Ethan F- Bassford among them. ciated (for reasons too arcane to i>et months in Highlands, N.C. They have Joe had news about two other class­ forth here) with the town in Ireland of eight children and 13 grandchildren, mates. His cousin, JOE LA VIERI, is still that name."- CFJ(ohnson) the most recent of whom was born on busy as chairman of Sterling Engineer­ Dr. Richard K. Morris I had a card from the REV. HENRY Friday the 13th, 1989. Harry looks great 214 Kelsey Hill Rd. ing Co. and he periodically sees WALT HAYDEN '39 with a glowing report of and was in fine fettle at the luncheon, Deep River, Conn. 06417 PEDICORD on Walt's journeys be­ his 50th Reunion. Let's all determine regaling one and all with numerous sto­ tween his house in Naples, Fla. and now to be on campus in 1992! ries relating to his days as an active 1m Woodstock, Vt. Walt is retired from his I was delighted to have my memory practitioner both in Connecticut and in The big news, of course, is our up­ position as vice president for personnel jogged with this letter from RALPH Florida. coming Half-Century Reunion, 14-17 at IBM. CALECETO: CARLOS RICHARDSON, our Class June 1990. WALLY BORIN , chairman of I picked up a few items about other "I wonder if you can remember the agent, writes that he and his wife, Jean, our Reunion Committee, has been busy classmates from the literature which last time we met - on the beach at Bi­ had a great trip to Alaska during Au­ gathering stalwart classmates willing comes pouring into my mail slot. Aetna arritz, France, 1945 - I have a photo gust of 1989, stating that they used mili­ to serve on his committee and, to date, publications informed me that DON of you posing with my buddy Ed Gil­ tary "spare-A" up and a cruise ship reports that GUS ANDRlAN, ED DAY celebrated his 75th birthday on christ. As for some news - my wife back. BURNHAM, AL VAN DUZER, AL Aug. 31. (Can this be true? He looks 20 and I (celebrated) our 43rd wedding Carlos continues that he is still flying HOPKINS - president, DICK MOR­ years younger.) And DICK BARNES anniversary on Sept. I - we have four charters and commuters out of San RIS- secretary, STEVE RILEY­ wrote to Aetna deploring the insurance wonderful grandsons- ages 15 Diego, and that he became a great­ Class agent, LES TIBBALS and CHAR­ industry's failure to make its case with months to five years - three with my grandparent for the second time a year LIE WALKER have all agreed to sup­ the public. He stated that "In my adult daughter and one with my son. ago. Carlos adds that the Class came port his efforts. He hopes to add WIL life, I have had only two employers - "Retirement is furthest from my through with "flying colors" in achiev­ GREENWOOD, WALLIE HOWE­ Aetna and the U.S. Air Force- and I mind; this September I will begin my ing 212 percent of its $7,500 Alumni vice president, BILL WOLF and DUN­ am still fiercely loyal to both." twelfth year as assistant principal at Fund goal, raising $15,945. Nice going, CAN YETMAN. Are there any other vol­ The journal of the Connecticut His­ New Utrecht High School in Brooklyn. fellows. Keep it up. unteers? torical Society lists STAN ENO as a I also el\joy a bi-monthly poker game DICK COBB writes that he is still en­ Wally got off to a good start recently new member. and keep active by serving as secretary joying a sales representative's life in with a meeting of Gus, Steve, himself Class Agent: for Unico, a national service organiza­ the plumbing field. Dick adds that a and JERRY HANSEN '51, the director Donald J. Day tion. During the summer, I just loaf, go "Boston boy" heads up his company of alumni and college relations. fishing and el\joy my grandsons. and that TIM HORNE, Class of 1959, is Gus and PEGGY (MA. '66) AN­ "I certainly would like to attend the C.E.O. of Watts Reg. Co., his ml\jor line. DRlAN returned at the end of the sum­ John R. Barber 50th in 1992 - I missed the 45th be­ Dick closes with the observation that mer from a trip to San Francisco, 4316 Chambers Lake Dr. cause of personal problems that came his golf game is getting better with age. Vancouver and other points west. Lacey, VVash. 98503 up. But will make every effort to attend In addition to the aforegoing, Dick Bill Wolf is negotiating with Paideia in 1992 ..." mentions with regret the death of his Press about the publication of his novel (I've forgotten why Ralph was in Bi­ old friend and our classmate, STAN about Benedict Arnold. I'm grateful to our able and articulate arritz that autumn day in '45. As for me, WOODWORTH (see In Memory), re­ Dick Morris suffered an il\iury to his Class Agent CHARLEY JOHNSON who I'd stumbled upon a beautiful post-con­ membering that he was a "heck of a right leg in early June and then pro­ again helps me write the 1942 column flict WW2 deal called Biarritz Anterican squash player." Dick encloses a clip­ ceeded to break the same leg on 3 July. with this "bad newsfgood news" letter: University. Not yet home and dis- ping concerning Stan from Herb Caen's column in the Aug. 1, 1989 edition of · make this column as newsy as possible, After 32 years in medical (cardiol-· ANNE '85 to CHARLES WILMERDING The San Francisco Chroni-Cle from as he is sure you do, too. But to do so, ogy) practice, MUNRO PROCTOR be­ '86. Her wedding party was made up of which I quote, "Shortly before he died he has to learn about your doings - gan a six-month stint in Geneva, three roommates, all of whom were to­ of cancer last month, Cate School's re­ honors you have received, work you Switzerland with the World Health Or­ gether for four years. Frank has a pic­ vered Stan Woodworth asked his long­ are doing, family, travels, etc. Please ganization. ture with 25 Trinity graduates that he'll time friend, Lew Vogler of Belvedere, if write. The Secretary's address is at the DR. HERB SNYDER is semi-retired, send to G. Hansen as soon as he can he'd deliver the eulogy at his funeral in top of this column. but continues working part-time in ra­ identify everyone. Santa Barbara. When Lew looked Class Agents: diology at Middlesex Memorial Hospi­ Class Agents: doubtful, Stan snapped, 'Look, I'm only John T. Fink tal in Middletown, Conn. He writes that Robert M. Blum, Esq. going to ask you to do this once!' Lew Richard C. Hastings, Jr. he is "er\ioying four granddaughters, John G. Grill, Jr. came through." Elliott K. Stein ages seven, eight, nine and 11." Reunion Chair: Class Agent: Walter Ghent THE RT. REV. WILLIAM G. WEIN­ Bernard F. Wilbur, Jr. Carlos A. Richardson, Jr. HAUER will retire as the Bishop of the Diocese of Western North Carolina in March, 1990. F. Bruce Hinkel Elliott K. Stein Class Agent: 15 Woodcrest Dr. 215 Gibbs Ave. Donald J. O'Hare New Providence, N.J. Newport, R.I. 02840 07974

Your Class officers met Sept. 12 at Mark W. Levy, Esq. CAPTAIN NED K. KULP was pre­ 220 North Quaker Ln. Trinity College to work on plans, Robert Tansill sented the Defense Education Eagle West Hartford, Conn. award of the Reserve Officers Associa­ including the Class Gift, for our 50th 06119 270 White Oak Ridge Rd. Class Reunion in 1994. Present were Short Hills, N.J. 07078 tion at its 63rd National Convention on June 24, 1989 in Houston, Texas. This DR. HARRY R. GOSSLING, Class presi­ Two members of the Class of 1946 dent; H. MARTIN TENNEY, first vice recognition was given as a result of his have retired from the State of Connect­ DON BOYKO '51 won the over 60's contributions towards public education president; DR. ROGER G. CONANT, icut Judicial Department. SIG KAUF­ second vice president; WILUAM R. "grand slam" by winning both the U.S. in the fields of global affairs and U.S. MANN began his retirement last Jan. 1, and Canadian squash singles and national security. Ned is a life member PEELLE, third vice president; YOUR and DAVE KAZARIAN's last day of ser­ doubles, and he also won the National of R.OA., serves as a consultant to the SECRETARY and ROBERT TOlAND, vice was October 1, 1989. JR., treasurer. Squash Tournament last Sep­ National Strategy Information Center Also on hand were Larry Duffy, Trin­ Class Agents: tember, a total of five national wins for and is president of SnacCo, Inc. ity College's director of development; Slegbert Kaufmann the year. Don has retired from Kelly DONALD REYNOLDS is pleased to and JULIANA GARRO '86, the College's David J. Kazarian, Esq. Services and is busy with travels on the announce the incorporation and relo­ assistant director of annual giving. Andrew W. Milligan squash circuit and real estate activities. cation of his firm to new offices. The Bob led a discussion on charitable Irving J. Pollner, M.D. FRANK PATTERSON presided over business will be under Donald Russell giving. Harry spoke on the role of a col­ an all Trinity wedding of his daughter, Reynolds Associates, Inc. They are lege in an urban environment and what Trinity is doing to contribute to the bet­ The Rt. Rev. E. Otis terment of the lives of disadvantaged <::harles minority people in Hartford. 4 Berkeley St. Cambridge, Mass. 02138 Update figures show that the Class of TRINITY COLLEGE 1944 made its annual giving goal of 42 $16,000. Total contributions, including THE REV. WEBSTER G. BARNETT, is pleased to announce a the Class Gift, were $16,481. Final to­ retired from the Episcopal priesthood - tals also show that our Class, at 74 per­ in 1986, notes that he "supplies work cent, finished second among the where needed." He and his wife who DELUXE TOUR classes of the past 50 years in members live in the Cascade Mountains near Mt. participating in the Alumni Fund cam­ Rainier, observed their 40th wedding to paign for 1988-89. anniversary last September. Their fam­ This is not bad at all for a class bro­ ily includes four married children and SCOTLAND ken up during World War II and liter­ six grandchildren. ally scattered to the four winds. Nice ANDREW BEATTIE retired in No­ going, guys! Incidentally, our Alumni vember, 1987. "The Home of Golf" Fund goal for 1989-90, which is not a Although retired, THE REV. reunion year for us, is $13,000. CHARLES BRIEANT continues as or­ May 12-20, 1990 By the time you read this, your Class ganist and choirmaster and assists the officers will have met again - Nov. priest at St. John's in Ogdensburg, N.Y. 11 - during Homecoming to continue He and Emily "commute" between Accommodations at Tumberry, Edinburgh working on plans for our 50th Class Re­ their residence and their ''vacation union. We will keep you informed in fu­ home" in the Adirondacks. They re­ and St. Andrews, playing 6 ture Class Notes in the Trinity cently welcomed a new grandson and famous courses, Reporter and other writings. grandnephew to their family circle. Let us hear from you on your ideas DOUGLAS CARTER has retired as a with sightseeing tours for for the 50th. Class input is desired and college administrator. He writes that he non-golfers. welcome. has four children and five grandchil­ JOHN T. FINK has accepted the prin­ dren "scattered around the country." cipal Class agent's position. His assis­ DAVID LAMBERT recently became a Trip limited to 40 participants. tants will be listed in this and future grandfather. He has joined the Wash­ London option: May 20 - 23. Class Notes ~they come aboard. ington, D.C. law firm of Eckert Sea­ Your Secretary received the Melvin mans Cherin & Mellott as head of the Jones Fellowship of the Lions Clubs In­ government contracts group. For additional Information: ternational Foundation (LCIF), pre­ THEODORE LOCKWOOD is begin­ Jerry Hansen sented to him by his home Newport, ning his ninth year in the Southwest as R.I. Lions Club. LCIF supports projects president of The Armand Hammer Director of Alumni and College Relations in humanitarian service, vocational United World College. "Each year one or training and disaster relief. or more of our graduates enter the Larry Duffy DR. ARTHUR L. CHAMBERS II second-year at Trinity," he says. wrote about his retirement. He is en­ JOHN ORR is retired and notes that Director ofDevelopment joying life traveling, playing with his he is a substitute teacher and "full-time Trinity College grandchildren and all the other golden golfer." His daughter, Marcy, is in her years' pleasures we all should be er\ioy­ last year of study toward a Ph.D. de­ Hartford, CT 06106 ing. Arthur is the official Class photog­ gree at the University of Virginia. She is (203) 297-2000 rapher. pastor of Covesville, Va. Presbyterian Help, help! Your Secretary wants to Church. consultants to managements and gov­ meeting for reunion chairpersons, class ernments, travel agents and tourism, agents, alumni association presidents marketing and communications. and members of the National Alumru Headliner Association. The Class of '60 was rep­ Class Agents: resented by DICK STOCKTON, BOB James B. Cortin, Esq. JOHNSON, ERNIE HADDAD, ED CI­ David F. Edwards Allyn J. Washington '52, author MILLUCA, RICK RICHARDSON, and of technical mathematics text­ JOHN BASSEIT who are busy plan­ books for college students, re­ ning Reunion and fund-raising activi­ Douglas C. Lee ceived an award from Addison­ ties for our 30th this coming June. This Box 3809 Wesley Publishing Company to loyal band has not only contributed Visalia, Calif. 93278 commemorate his 25 years of ex­ time and effort to Alma Mater, but also cellence as a textbook writer. The have seven sons/daughters among the Classes of 1990, '91, and '92. You will be The great Bay area quake of 1989 hit award was presented to him at the hearing more on the Reunion, but mark three days prior to my writing these introduction of the fifth edition of your calendar for June 14-16 and let's Class notes. I was talking with a client his textbook, Basic Technical Math­ have the biggest turnout ever. in Fresno when he put me on hold and ematics with Calculus, which has Class Agents: took another call. When he returned, he been the leading textbook in its said there had been a major quake in Robert G. Johnson field for over 20 years. During his the Bay area, and he had to break away. Richard W. Stockton Until 11:30 p.m. that evening, I was try­ teaching career, he taught at Trin­ Reunion Chairs: ing to track down my three children ity from 1955-57, was head of G.H.L. "Rick" Richardson who live in San Francisco. I'm happy to the mathematics department at John Bassett report that all were well, and that there Dutchess Community College for was only minor damage to contents of over 20 years and served as presi­ living quarters. dent of the New York State Math­ Bill Kirtz They're still trying to assess the ex­ ematics Association of Two Year 26Wyman St. tent of the damage, but it appears that Waban, Mass. 02168 the original estimates on numbers of Colleges. persons who died in the collapse of the Cypress overpass on Highway 880 m Walking Magazine editor BRAD sity of Wisconsin, and still another is Oakland were exaggerated. The free­ KETCHUM gets still more recogni­ Theodore T. Tansi working in Fond du Lac. way apparently had very few cars on it tion - the latest is an admiring profile 29 Wood Duck Ln. Finally, I called HUGH ZIMMERMAN compared to normal. Speculation is T~e,Conn.06801 in a newspaper chain near his Cohas­ that just about everyone was eitlier at to have him update me on his life. As many of you may know, he has remar­ set, Mass. home. In it, Brad says that he the World Series, or hunkered down m parks a couple of miles away from his front of a television set to watch. ried and he and his new wife, Thea, A June 29 1989 article in The Hart­ have a two-and-a-half-year-old son office, getting exercise and saving a BARRIE CLIFF writes from Yar­ ford Coura,;t described the closing of buck or $11 at the same time. mouth, Mass. where he and his wife, named Kyle. Hugh is in private law the Connoisseur Shop in West Hartford practice in Warrenville, Ill. (outside oJ On Oct. 27, LT. COL. GEORGE RUS­ ·Paulette are the sole proprietors of TIGIAN retired from the Air Force after and quotes proprietor JEFF HODGES. Chicago) and has become a golf fa­ ·Pewter Crafters of Cape Cod. It's a 28 years of active service. He has been After 30 years in the business of selling natic. He is trying desperately hard to business they started in 1977. It's still handcrafted housewares, he is closing in the transportation department of the very small (five persons), but from the break 80, and is (he says) coming very the store because of higher rent re­ close. Air Force for the entire time, and has 43 catalog sheet which Barrie enclosed, quired by the new landlord of the seen military air transportation evolve the products appear to be of extremely building. Class Agents: from the twin engine propeUer plane to - high quality (some items are ultra mod­ Peter C. Luquer the four-engine jumbo jet. He served in ern while others are more traditional). Richard S. Stanson four regular overseas assignments: Pe~r Grafters sells at both retail and twice to Germany, once to Puerto Rico, wholesale, as well as direct mail: and Bruce N. Macdonald once to Viet Nam, and a temporary as­ there is a fair amount of busmess Paul A. Cataldo, Esq. 1116 Weed St. c/o Bachner, Roche & signment to the Philippines. travel, appearing at craft shows up and New Canaan, Conn. Cataldo The Oct. 21 issue of On the Avenue, down the East Coast. 06840 55 W. Central St., Box pictures LEWIS FRUMKES at Maxim's Pewter Grafters is located at 927 267 in New York City in the company of Main St., Yarmouth Port, Mass. 02675, JOACHIM PENGEL of Simsbury, Fr~,Mass.02038 other luminaries including Phyllis and the telephone is 508-362-3407. Conn., who is an associate professor at Diller, Dr. Ruth, Erica Jong and Tom DICK COUDEN stops in once in a the University of Hartford, writes that HANS W. BECHERER, who was Wolfe. The occasion was a eel, '>ration while, when he is visiting from Chi­ he also has been practicing psycho­ named president and chief operating of Lewis' most recent book, The Man­ cago, otherwise Barrie has seen few therapy in Avon, where he is vice presi­ officer of Deere & Company, has been hattan Cocktail, published by Simon & classmates in recent years. He notes dent with thP. Farmington Valley named chief executive, as well. Schuster. that he is definitely planning on attend­ Behavioral Medicine Group. Class Agents: Judging from the lack of mail, class­ ing our 40th Reunion in 1992. I spent a weekend in October with Richard L. Behr mates are spending more time exercis­ BOB and Syd BUFFUM forward their BILL DAKIN and his wife, Gretchen, on Frederick M. Tobin, Esq. ing than typing. Please slow down for a usual humorous announcement of the Squam Lake in New Hampshire. ~e second and disclose some recent ac­ winter opening of the Manasota Beach told me that he continues to el\)oy his tivities as we begin to plan our 30th Club. Last year they said not to beat newly-discovered sport, fiyfishing. He Shepard M. Scheinberg, Reunion. around the "Bush" . . . Dukalus; and and his wife even went to fiyfishing Esq. P.O. Box 871 Class Agents: this year they'd be sunk if you didn't school in Montana this summer. In Feb­ visit them. Bob and Syd are pictured 1 Bayside Ave. Peter H. Kreisel ruary of 1990, Bill is planning a week of East Quogue, N.Y. 11942 DaleN. Peatman sitting in a tiny catboat that has obvi­ cross-country skiing in Norway With a ously sunk; they're up to their waists in group of friends with whom he regu­ LEIGHTON MciLVAINE has joined water. larly skis. Furman Selz Capital Management in The Rev. Arthur F. SKIP CORWIN has retired after be­ LY POWELL talked with me on the ing a pilot at Eastern Airlines for the New York City. "Skip" McNulty telephone from his office in Fond du Calvary Church past 36 years. He and his wife, Carol, Lac, Wis., where he is president of the Class Agents: 315 Shady Ave. recently bought a new house at 75 trust division of the National Exchange Robert D. Coykendall Pittsburgh, Pa. 15206 Country Club Way in Ipswich, Mass. Bank and Trust, in that city. He, too, William J. Schreiner 01938. His five children are all married, has been skiing in Europe regularly. In 1 am sorry that I haven't received any on their own, and there are 11 grand­ late January of next year, he and his news from any members of our Class children ... so far! He also writes that wife, Laura, will spend 10 days in Cha­ since the last issue of the Reporter. I he expects to attend our 40th Reunion monix, France ef\ioying the slopes. Robert T. Sweet did hear from my son, Tim, who is a ju­ in 1992. Two of his children, Kate and Ted, re­ 4934 Western Ave. nior at Trinity, that he ran into DA VlD Chevy Chase, Md. 20816 Class Agents: cently married and live with their STRAWBRIDGE at Parents Weekend Nicholas J. Christakos spouses in Chicago and Milwau_kee. this year. David's son is a pledge at St. William M. Vibert Another son is a junior at the Uruver- On Oct. 21 the College hosted a A's. Otherwise I haven't heard anything about anyone. How about some news something more than looking after his for the next issue? personal investments. When he became Class Agents: president and CEO of Prudential Bache Thomas F. Bundy, Jr. Securities, my roladex for Jim's phone Headliner Judson M . Robert numbers jumped from five to eight The three added after the house in the country are for his limo phone, his pri­ The Rev. Andrew Hedtler Fair- G. Alexander Creighton vate line and his home fax machine. field '65 was elected lOth bishop of 117 Lincoln Rd. These are all important for those of us the Episcopal Diocese of North Lincoln, Mass. 01773 who may want to communicate with Dakota last summer. From 1968- Jim from time to time because we may 77, he served as pastor and itiner­ never ever see him again. Zibby are you Greetings Classmates! This is my there? ant missionary to isolated Native first stab at your Class notes for the Vic Keen and Scott Reynolds cata­ American communities in North­ gossip column; please bear with me lyzed a luncheon on July 27 at the New em Alaska. From 1977-1989, he and give me some feedback and ammu­ York Harvard Club for those in our served on the staff of the Episcopal nition for the next edition by either Class who could make it to meet Tom Diocese of Alaska, specializing in writing to me directly or through the Gerety. Those who made it from the ministry development and congre­ alumni office or pick up the phone and Class of 1963: STARR BRINCKER­ gational consultation. He is an in­ give me the news in my voice mailbox HOFF, v.p., Paine Webber; THE REV. strument rated pilot and flew 4,800 at 1-800-288-7783 vm box 1218. This lat­ DICK CHANG, deputy to the Episcopal ter mode will hopefully encourage presiding bishop; SANDY CREIGHTON, accident-free hours during his 21 those of you who hate to write, giving v.p., Prudential Realty Group; DICK years in Alaska. you a more impulsive way to get the F1ELD, e.v.p., Bank of New York; Vic message across. I am sure you can Keen, partner, Kronish, Lieb, Weiner & come up with enough fodder or some­ Hellman; GERY KNISELY, partner, thing else to make this section of the Johnson, Smith & Knisley; BOB KNOX, MORRIS WEAVER announced they tions have resulted in his purchase of Trinity Reporter come alive with the investor, Fire Island, N.Y. and Sarasota, will exchange medical practices. Mor­ North America. Class of "63. Let us hear from you soon. F1a; STAN MARCUSS, who just re­ rie gets the rich F1orida housewives; I want to hear from MIKE BOYLE, After commuting for over 20 months ported that he is now the managing Bruce gets a cow, two pigs and a hyena TOM CONE, CHRIS Gl!BON, BILL from Boston to my office in Newark, partner of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley and Adman TED PETTUS just completed CAMPBELL and BRYAN MARMESH or N J. weekly, I am now e[\joying a much McCloy, a 350 lawyer worldwide firm authoring his first book, Leona Helm­ else! more stable existence commuting now headquartered in Washington, D.C.; sley, Misunderstood. Saint. only 25 minutes from Lincoln to my of­ BOB MURDOCK, program director, Class Agents: And finally, GEORGE KEIJ.NER re­ fice at Pru Center. This transfer gives ffiM Gallery of Science & Art; DAVE Kenneth R. Auerbach ports that lengthy financial negotia- me the opportunity to return to a more RAYMOND, president, Electronic Daniel A. Saklad normal existence. I am now heading up Equipment Sales Corp.; SCOTT REY­ The Prudential's asset management di­ NOLDS, s.v.p., Bankers Trust Co.; DON vision for its real estate assets in New SMITH, president, Don Smith & Co.; England and upper New York, a billion­ Jim Tozer, president and CEO, Pruden­ dollar portfolio. tial Bache Securities; and JACK WAG­ AREA ASSOCIATION Last May the local New York papers GETT, administrative dean at Trinity. It carried a notice that ED TRICKETI was a great get together with Tom! ACTIVITIES 44 would be performing in Paramus, N.J. Class Agents: NEW YORK: SCOTT REYNOLDS who watc11.es such Scott W. Reynolds - rags daily for news of Ed to)d VIC President Nancy Katz '84, Tel: 212-348-0314 Michael A. Schulenberg KEEN, and they planned to surprise Ed by showing up. The rest of the story is Over 50 young alumni gathered at the Trinity Club of New York's "Wel­ that Scott forgot and Vic's car broke William B. Bragdon ill come to the Big Apple" reception. The event, organized by Karen Son­ down so no surprise for Ed. Star Route, Box 6 none '88, was held at the International Center on Oct. 30. DICK GOODEN is no longer com­ New Hope, Pa_ 18938 muting from LA. to St. Louis. As re­ WASHINGTON, D.C.: ported last issue, he is now with the President Laurence Bory '65, Tel: 703-892-5912 p.rivate banking division of his long CHARLEY TODD no sooner gave up term friend and employer, Citibank. his Class responsibilities when he fell The Alumni Admissions Support Committee of the Trinity Club of &ott R. had lunch with Dick several flat on his face. Trying desperately to Washington held a reception for area guidance counselors on Nov. 1. The weeks back while Dick was back in regain his long, long, very long ago New York to be "reworked" for this faded youth, Charley climbed on a bicy­ reception was held at the Holiday Inn in Bethesda, Md. new asignment. As most of you know, cle without training wheels and Dick's daughter has been an excep­ promptly flew over the handle bars. BALTIMORE: tional tennis player for most of her The result was that his face for a time President David Clark '80, Tel: 301-244-5292 years and is now on the pro circuit. We looked like a cross between a fresh wish her the best of luck. lf you see her road-kill and a discarded Big Mac. His The Alumni Admissions Support Committee of the Trinity Club of Bal­ name on the docket if the rounds come recovery was aided by the news that he timore hosted a dinner for area guidance counselors on Oct. 30. The din­ near you, please be sure to go spectate and DANA WHITE have been invited to ner was held at the Admiral Fell Inn in the Fellspoint area, and attracted and cheer. usher in 1990 at a two-week palace 11 guidance counselors. YOURS TRULY and my wife, Eliza­ party hosted by some fat-cat potentate beth, were meandering around the Bur­ in the desert of ~asthan , India I'm BOSTON: lington Mall outside Boston where, lo not making this up! and behold, we bumped into Back Bay­ BILL BURNHAM invited EU KAR­ President Ernest Haddad '60, Tel: 617-726-8620 SON '63 to join him yachting on his 40- ites Marge and PETER SHERIN. They The Trinity Club of Boston hosted a reception in honor of President Tom were on a quest for a birthday present foot sailboat, meandering around Cape for their son at the Disney Shop. The Cod, Nantucket, Block Island and New­ Gerety. The reception, held at the Harvard Club on Nov. 1, attracted in four of us took advantage of this seren­ port. What a messy trail of beer cans. excess of 150 alumni. Alumni were given the opportunity to meet the dipitous moment and caught up over Incidentally, Bill's boat was recently on new president as well as ask him questions on the state of the College in a beer and pizza. Peter is still president the cover of Yachting Magazine. discussion session. of Bell Markets, shortly expanding into DON LEVY and his wife, Diane, sum­ some wholesale directions. Their big mered in Antarctica, studying the ter­ news is that they will be spending more rible effects of living without a time in Chatham (on the Cape) where Bloomingdale's nearby. REPRESENTATION AT INAUGURATION they are now beginning to stock a new On the other side of the planet, CHARUE FRANCIS, armed with one second home with furniture. Richard S. Lovering '76 represented Trinity at the inauguration of Even if you are not prone to scour can of Ajax, scrubbed Exxon oil off the WSJ daily, by now most of you are Alaskan rocks. Michele Tolela Myers as president of Denison University on October 27, aware that JIM TOZER is now doing DR. BRUCE WAXMAN and DR. 1989. Peter J. Knapp 20 Buena Vista Rd. West Hartford, Conn. II 06107 In the Hartford area JOHN LEMEGA is a Democratic candidate for West Hartford's Board of Education in the coming November election. He is a partner in the Hartford law firm of Hal­ loran, Sage, Phelon & Hagarty, and spe­ cializes in insurance-related litigation. Active in several professional associa­ tions, John also is a lecturer at continu­ ing legal education seminars and programs. He is involved in work with his church, is a youth soccer league ref­ eree, and has been a member of the Fox Foundation which awards college scholarships annually to inner city stu­ dents. John and Joyce are the parents of two children. Best wishes, John! Word has been received thatCHED MARKOVICH, vice president of the Hartford-based Mechanics Savings Bank, was recently elected to the board of directors of Engineered Sinterings & Plastics, Inc. of Watertown. That's all for now. Let's hear from more of you, and don't forget our 25th Reunion next June! Class Agent: Richard Roth Reunion Chairs: ALDEN GORDON, associate professor of fine arts, center, was presented with the Merrill A. Yavinsky "Person of the Year" award by the Trinity Club of Hartford for his contributions to the Peter A. Sturrock College and community. Shown at the presentation are Marion Hardy '84, the Club's exec­ utive vice president, and its president, Roger Derderian '67.

Thomas S. Hart aware, credentialled in the worlds of terns division of United Technologies in 20 Kenwood St. WilliAm T. Barrante, Boston,Mass.02124 the academy and of law. I'm pleased by Esq. Farmington, Conn. what I have seen, and reassured by the 107 Scott Ave. JOHN GREGG is setting records for 45 comments of Yale folk I know who re­ P.O. Box 273 fund raising for The Episcopal Acad­ Watertown, Conn. 06795 August brought a long letter from member him vividly." emy. He currently serves as chairman - And, naturally, there was some fam­ of The Episcopal Academy's annual BOB STEPTO, who reported on finish· PAUL E. RAETHER has been elected ing his 15th (fifth as full professor of ily news from Robert, whose last anni­ giving major gifts committee and just versary with wife Michele was their a Charter Trustee of the College by the completed a term as an alumni trustee English) at Yale. In addition to his Board of Trustees. Paul is a general teaching, Bob has contributed to 22nd! Son Gabe is a sophomore at for the school. Brown, and son Rafe is a high school partner in the investment firm of YOUR SECRETARY ef\ioyed the weighty tomes like the Columbia Lit­ Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Company erary History of the United States, freshman "basically trying to get his Trinity-Bowdoin "short-

William H. Reynolds, Jr. 5740 Ridgetown Cir. Dallas, Texas 75230

DR. BRIAN J. CASTRONOVO is re­ siding at 5565 Canoga Ave. (#311) in Woodland Hills, Calif. 91367. Brian is a professor of Spanish at California State University- Northridge, and would be delighted to hear from Trinity classmates. LAWRENCE McCLURE has been promoted to vice president, human re­ sources, for Pratt and Whitney. He will be responsible for the company's Con­ necticut operations and for providing guidance to International Fuel CeUs and Homogenous Metals, Inc. YOUR SECRETARY eJ\joyed a break from the Texas heat in August Betty and I and friends from Princeton sailed a bare boat charter from Kennebunk­ port up to Penobscot Bay and back to Falmouth. We had a handsome 42-foot ketch and a fabulous vacation. Anyone interested in going some time please give us a call. Also, to increase news from other CLAY KANZLER '79 gave a painting titled "Morning Fog" to classmates, I will send out a mailing Trinity College in memory of the late Constance E. Ware, who was this winter for publication in the spring vice president for development. From left: Richard H. Ware, her hus­ Reporter. In the meantime, drop me a 47 band; Kanzler; and George E. Chaplin, the Charles S. Nutt Professor line with your news when you're in the mood. Happy Holidays. - of Fine Arts, who taught Kanzler when he was an undergraduate. Class Agents: John P. Reale, Esq. ural roads in Vermont and mysterious mountains in Hawaii are among L. Peter Lawrence R the scenes captured in oils by artist Clay Kanzler '79, whose artwork was exhibited in Austin Arts Center this past fall. Panl M. Sachner Titled "Paintings from 1979-1989," the exhibition represented the full 305 West 103rd St. Apt. 7 range of Kanzler's work over the past decade. Included in the exhibition was New York, N.Y. 10025 "Morning Fog," a painting which Kanzler has given to the College in mem­ ory of the late Constance E. Ware, who was vice president for development As reported last issue, LAWRENCE at Trinity. MINARD was recently named manag­ ing editor of Forbes magazine. Laury As an undergraduate, Kanzler was a President's Fellow in studio arts and began his career at Forbes in 1974 as a won the Pappas Award as the most promising senior artist. In 1979, Kanzler reporter-researcher and had moved up settled in Pomfret, Vt., where he works from his studio in a converted barn. the ranks to deputy managing editor before being named to his current "I wanted to see ifl could make it as a painter," Kanzler said. "I figured, I position, which now makes him the might as well find out now, because if I can't, I should get a briefcase and go number-two man on the Forbes do something else." masthead. Another Class of '72 journalist, Ten years later, Kanzler is still wielding a paintbrush and his work is GEORGE GRAVES, has returned to the shown in galleries throughout the East Coast and in the Midwest. His paint­ Hartford area - and The Hartford Coumnt - after spending the past ings have found homes in many corporate collections, such as the R.J. Rey­ nine years at newspapers in Kentucky. nolds Building Collection and the Gerrish Corporation, as well as in private George's new position at The Coumnt collections. is town editorials' editor, and the capi­ tal district town in which he has chosen Working both in his studio and out-of-doors, Kanzler captures the essence to reside is Simsbury. of the Vermont countryside in his oil paintings. His techniques incorporate JOHN "KLONDIKE" KOEHLER, vibrant colors, transparent mists, and a broad range ofline and form. Dur­ KIRK "CHIEF'' KUBICEK, JOHNNY "GUITAR" MOSES, EUOT "FRED" OS­ ing the past few years, Kanzler has spent the winter months in the Carib­ BORN '71, COMPTON MADDUX, and bean, Bermuda and Hawaii, where he worked on combining a warm palette "WAIUN' DAVE" ROBINSON are alumni who comprise The Outerspace with the effects of changing light and water into his work. Band, and have played together since their freshman year. They still perform about 20 shows annually, specializing in barbecues, ski lodges and coastal at Northeastern University, and an as­ resorts. sociate clinical professor of medicine ALAN PATRIGNANI recently com­ at Tufts University School of Medicine. pleted all phases of the American He resides in Sharon, Mass. with his Board of Orthodontics' comprehensive wife and two children. examination for certification in orth­ RICHARD REINHART has recently odontics. After Trinity, Alan received changed addresses. He is now residing his dental degree and speciality educa­ in Burbank, Calif. Richard is a writer/ tion in orthodontics at the State Uni­ producer with Warner Bros. Tele­ versity of New York/Buffalo, and he vision. conducts his practice in the Buffalo MICHAEL VITALE recently moved suburb of Williamsville. to Springfield, Mass. He is a senior gys­ Class Agents: tems analyst with Massachusetts Mu­ William A. Fisher UI tual Life. R- Thomas Robinson CHRISTINE SIEGRIST VERTE­ FEUILLE has been nominated by Gov. William A. O'Neill to be a Superior Patricia Tunesld Court judge. Her nomination will need 560 N Street, S.W. to be confirmed by the legislature's ju­ Apt. #110 diciary committee and then by the full § Washington, D.C- 20024 legislature Chris graduate

ANNE BROWN RODGERS did not exactly move across the street. She and husband Richard have gone to Reyk­ javik, Iceland. Anne had baby # 2 due in September and is a free-lance writer. KAREN BLAKESLEE is on board the USS Shenandoah, having just received her M.S. in human resources man­ agement. EADS JOHNSON and wife Peggy are back from Tokyo having loved every samurai moment. They have a little Eads IV (six) and Niki (four). Eads is still with Morgan-Stanley (he darn well should be president after spending three years straight in Japan) in New York. In April they were with TOM and Renee KORENGOLD. Elsewhere in the Reporter you will find a photo of Elizabeth Tayntor (a Middlebury alum) and JAY GOWELL'S wedding, including the Alpha Delts who were present. Jay notes that the Alpha Delta Phi cannon, which appears in the foreground of the picture, was ceremoniously fired to mark the occa­ sion. Missing from the photo was BOB BUFFUM '77 who made a hasty depar­ ture to return to his family. The night before the wedding, his wife, Unda, gave birth to their third child, a daugh­ ter named Sarah. Class Agents: ERIC LUSKIN '77 displays the 1989 Philadelphia Emmy Award he Dana M. Faulkner received for the public television production "Ballet Ruse." Gerald F. La Plante L. Lindsay Mann Donald V. Romanik, Esq. 49 ric Luskin '77, a public television producer and director, won a 1989 Mary Desmond Philadelphia Em my A ward for Outstanding Cultural Broadcast as the Pinko E - wish 101 Ellwood Ave. producer of Ballet Ruse. Mount Vernon, N.Y. 10552 Billed as "classical dance with a comic twist," Ballet Ruse was a co­ production of New Jersey Network- the state's public television system LAURIE BLAiR ERNST is director of -and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. Its director and lighting college counseling at The MacDuffie School in Springfield, Mass. She and designer also won regional Emmys at the seventh annual competition of the her husband are the parents of a Philadelphia chapter of the N ational Academy of Television Arts and Sci­ daughter (see Bi rths), who was born ences held last September. on her father's birthday. Their son, Da­ vid, is in first grade. "Ballet R use was shot in three days in the studio; it was a lot of fun," said Class Agents: Luskin. Ballet and prime-time television soap operas are parodied in the half­ Mary Stodolink Cheyne hour special which features two ballets choreographed by Peter Anastos, Stephen M. Sunega artistic director of the Garden State Ballet and creator of the infamous all­ male Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo. Kathryn Maye Murphy Aired on many public television stations around the country. Ballet Ruse 6 Kneeland Rd. Marlborough, Conn. won praise from the critics, too. The Philadelphia Inquirer called it "an 06447 astoundingly polished and entertaining local production." As an undergraduate at Trinity, Luskin majored in English and political French literature studies at Trinity have paid off for STEPHEN BERKO­ science, and was involved with WRTC. "I thought I was going to be a musi­ WITZ. He sent a postcard in August cian," he said. He changed his mind and went on to study at the University which read: "Arrived in Paris to work ofPennsylvania's Annenberg School of Communications, where he earned as a rabbi with a liberal synagogue af­ ter three years in the Los Angeles area. a master's degree. He explained that he first "stumbled into New Jersey pub­ Will soon be joined by my wife, Julia, lic television as a production assistant. formerly of Leningrad, anxious to re­ "The last two years, personally and professionally, have been great," said turn to the Continent." Steve hopes to organize a European alumni phonathon Luskin, who noted that The Making of Dr. Who, a documentary he had pro­ in April, 1990! Congratulations go out duced, received an Emmy nomination. to PETER T. MOTT and Janet Banks­ he in Matt on the birth of their second As for the future, has lots of projects mind - so watch those public daughter (see Bi rths). Emily joins her television credits for his name. sister, An na, who is three years old. Pe­ ter was appointed a partner with the law firm of Marsh, Day and Calhoun in ing forward to our upcoming lOth!" At the time she wrote, NATALIE AN­ DERSON was getting ready for Labor Day with PENNY SUTTER and her hus­ band, Bob Grote, at their beachfront home on Long Beach, Long Island. She notes that Penny's a free-lance writer and Bob teaches English lit and theol­ ogy in Manhattan to "good Catholic kids." Natalie spends a lot of time with JOHN SHEPARD who's still in D.C., working for the Wilderness Society as a "hot-shot" fundraiser. CYNTiflA LEINWAND BRESSLER is an attorney with PolyGram Records in New York City. LINDA BUCHIN is a consultant to the benefits-consulting firm of Mercer Meidinger Hansen in Boston. STEVE BUTLER continues to teach at St. Luke's School in Greenwich Vil­ lage. His wife, DOREEN RICE-BlrrLER '86, writes that he has established "one WILLIAM BULLARD '80 and Diana Dempsey were married on July 15, 1989 in Durham, N.H. of the most successful children's fenc­ ing clubs in the country, and will soon Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (first row, 1. tor.) Carol Ann Goldberg '80, Julie Rogers Bullard take on coaching full time." In the sum­ '79, Ramsey Gross Bell '77, Sally Bullard Steck '73, bride, groom, Lise Halpern Cooley '80, Brook mer of '88, he was selected to train un­ Messier Scott '82,Jack Scott '82; (second row, 1. to r.)John O'Brien '80,John Medford '79, Sam (Fran­ der the United States Olympic coaches cis C.) Gray '78, Bob Shaw '80,JeffCooley '80. at the Olympic Training Center in Colo­ rado Springs. January. He also serves on the board of ROBERT WILLIAMS graduated from trustees of the Museum of Art, Science Wharton School in 1986 with an M.BA. and Industry in Bridgeport, and on the His ml\ior was in finance wi.th a con­ board of directors of the Fairfield centration in public policy. He is cur­ YMCA. rently at Touche Ross in the Congratulations also go out to Davis management consulting practice. In and NANCY GUNNER HEUSSLER on 1987 he married Elizabeth Duttamel. the birth of their first child, a daughter, Class Agents: (see Birtks). Dede Seeber Boyd CATIIERINE PSZONOWSKY COL Harry F. Jones ill recently moved to Ipswich, Mass. She Mlchael D. Reiner, Esq. is employed by Wang Laboratories as a John F. O'Connell, Jr. principal information systems analyst. 50 WILLIAM M. DOW writes that it is er\ioyable to be back in Connecticut. - He has been busy at work and, when he wrote in August, was busy with sum­ mer play. ARTIIUR ROBINSON is now work­ ing for the University of Alabama in the JEFFREY and SUSAN KELSEY department of Romance languages and BRODERSEN have moved to Cheshire, classics. Conn. Jeffrey, who received his M.BA. Class Agents: from Sacred Heart University in 1988, Robyn Weinstein Cimbol is currently employed as a chief buyer Charles D. Glanville, Esq. for Sikorsky Aircraft. Susan received Caleb D. Koeppel, Esq. an M.S. in computer science from R.P.I. ROBERT HERBST '80 and Judith Margolis were married on June in 1987. She is a data base analyst for 25, 1989. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (1. tor.) Daniel Schlen­ Northeast Utilities. Jon Zonderman SHARON DAY is a pediatric resident 15 Ruby Rd. off'82, Michael Gould '81, groom, bride, James Cropsey '79, Ken­ neth Crowe '79. at New England Medical Center in West Haven, Conn. Boston. 06516 child, a son, Michael Patrick, a year ago KEN FESTA '85 sends news of Melinda Moore Cropsey September. KWAKU SINTIM-MlSA who has begun 70 Clairmont St. FRANCIE DOBBIN mAYER writes LEONIE HERSHFIELD, who re­ shooting a film in his native Ghana. The that she is staying home with her three Longmeadow, Mass. movie is being produced by Robert ceived her J.D. degree from UConn 01106 pre-schoolers. "It's busy enough for School of Law, is a vice president-trust Redford and stars Holly Hunter. me!" she says. at Bank of Boston Connecticut. Class Agents: Class Agents: MIKE HUEBSCH recently joined PETER COUGHLAN who lives in Los Sarah M. Larkin Joanne E. Johnson, Esq. Blackstone Financial Management, the Angeles, has begun a Ph.D. program in Susan S. Fiske-Williams T. Michael Preston, Esq. investment advisory subsidiary of The applied linguistics. Blackstone Group, as a vice president JULIE JOHNSON was married on and senior portfolio manager. He was Aug. 12 (see Wed4ings). Several Trinity H. Scott Nesbitt formerly a vice president with The 3450 Kleybolte Ave. Carol A. Goldberg friends were present including ALISON First Boston Corporation at the firm's LEIGH MOUNTFORD, KATIE HARRIS, Apartment #5 50 East 85th St. Cincinnati, Ohio 45226 New York, N.Y. 10028 New York headquarters. Other changes GARRE'IT KEATING, ANNE MONT­ are afoot - Mike planned to be mar­ GOMERY O'CONNER and ANNE 1m ried last September (see Wed4ings). WARNER COSTELLO. Julie writes that Pretty skimpy news gang .. JOHN CHANDLER is working for Class Agents: they missed GAIL and ROB MUR­ LAURA WILCOX ROKOSZAK is Cadbury Schweppes in Stamford, Thomas D. Casey DOCK. Julie and her husband are living working hard as a high school teacher Conn. Nina W. McNeely Diefenbach in Cambridge. At the time she wrote, as well as helping out the drama club DR. WILLIAM DUGGAN, JR. is a Beth Isham Nichols she was working as the assistant direc­ and working as the freshman class ad­ third-year resident anesthesiologist at Reunion Chairs: tor of the Olmsted Park Program, a viser at her school in New Jersey. ln Hartford Hospital. He and his wife, Patricia Mairs-Klestadt statewide program to rehabilitate his­ addition to this daunting schedule load, Karen (Mackas) Duggan, had their first David J. Koeppel toric urban parks. She says she's "look- she is also about orie-third through her doctorate at N.Y.U. Finally, she has a master's in reading at the University found time (or was drafted by Dr. Mo· of Michigan's School of Education. She shell) to choreograph this year's musi· and her husband, Jon, have recently cal revue at Trinity. bought a house in Ann Arbor. Headliners WENDY GORUN, the only other NANCY MEADE has moved from conscientious classmate to drop me a Anchorage, Alaska and is teaching first­ note this time, (get the hint everybody year law students legal writing at UCai­ Scott Keilty, D.M.D., '83 re­ else?) writes of her pending wedding to Berkeley. She says, "For fun I'm doing ceived The American Society of Marc L. Tayer. As noted last issue, a bunch of triathlons." Dentistry for Children A ward, Wendy is in San Diego where she is in DALE RYAN has been elected chair­ which is given to the individual her second year of study in clinical psy­ man of the City of Hartford's Commis­ who is most outstanding in the chology at the California School of Pro­ sion on Cultural Affairs. field of dentistry for children. The fessional Psychology. HUNT STOOKEY, a leveraged­ award was presented at the 1989 Other tidbits of news include the investment manager with Cigna Invest­ commencement exercises of the birth of a child to BEVERLEY GEBEL­ ments Corp. in Hartford, is a co­ EIN BARBER and her husband, RON, founder of Capital Arts, a non-profit University of Connecticut School and the engagement of ROBIN L. FINS. group that helps introduce Hartford's of Dental Medicine. Keilty is prac­ WILLIAM COLBY, an attorney in Read­ arts scene to young professionals. ticing at the family dentistry of­ ing, Pa., and wife Diane, are happy to Class Agents: fices of Folia and Walloch in announce the arrival of their son (see Janice M. Anderson Farmington, Conn. Births). ROBERTA L. SCHERR, M.D. is Eric W. Linsley a family medicine resident at the Hunt­ W. Townsend Ziebold, Jr. erdin Medical Center in Flemington, Susan Greene '84 was a member N.J. of the squash team that represented KATHLEEN GROFF is now on the the United States at the 13th faculty of the Watkinson School in Lori Davis Shield Hartford. Also in Hartford is DAVID 104 High St., #2 World Maccabiah Games in Israel Charlestown, Mass. last summer. The Games, held ev­ LEIDELL who graduated from Ford­ 02129 ery four years, feature Jewish ath­ ham Law School and is an attorney at rl letes from all over the world in Cummings and Lockwood. He expects to be working in commercial real es­ Hi everyone! There's loads of news competition similar to that of the tate and corporate law. to report. Olympics. Despite being injured JAMIE KAPTEYN is at the Cushing Reunion will be here before we during her first match, Greene Academy where he is teaching English know it! Please do us the favor of up­ "did well in the individual tourna­ and coaching both soccer and lacrosse. dating us on your whereabouts. We es­ ment, reaching the quarterfinals." I caught a glimpse of ALEX pecially need you to fill out the change A highlight was "marching into a BANKER, now an over-worked first­ of address form provided in this issue stadium of 50,000 cheering peo­ year student at Harvard Business and return it to the Alumni Office. That School, at the wedding of JOHN SI­ way you'll be sure to receive all the lat­ ple" during the opening ceremo­ MONS. John, at Chemical Bank in New est details about our big 5th. nies. At Trinity, she was captain of York, is spending his time fixing up a Congratulations and best wishes to the tennis team in her senior year. new Hudson Valley house that he and all of the newlyweds. MEL FOY and Since graduation, she has worked his wife, Betsy, recently acquired. MARK HAMEL were married on June in publishing in New York City. ANN BROWN is currently in Kansas 17 (see Weddings) and are living in 51 City where she is performing in West Hartford after a honeymoon to "Nunsense." Bermuda. Mel is an underwriting ac­ - KAREN MACDONALD recently count executive for Cigna in Bloom­ joined Cabot Advertising in Boston as a field and Mark is a senior accountant senior art director. In addition to ad­ for Arthur Andersen, Hartford. vertising, Cabot has divisions in public Also newly wed is KRISTER JOHN­ relations and direct marketing. SON to Malinda Eichner. This Trinity­ As for me, after graduating from Conn. College union occurred on June Wharton Business School, I traveled 17 (popular day!). Krister is currently around Europe for three months before studying for a Ph.D. in religious studies starting in brand management at at the University of Pennsylvania after Procte.r & Gamble. I assume that every­ receiving a master's in theological one I know will now buy Dawn Dish­ studies from Harvard. Krister and washing Liquid and keep my job se­ Malinda live in Ardmore, Pa. cure! Please note my new address for KIRSTEN KIMBALL KAPTEYN and the flood of letters (well, at least Laura JAMIE '83 write that they were "finally R. and Wendy G.) that I'm sure you married after all these years and life is will all be sending . .. wonderful!" (see Weddings). Both Kap­ teyns can be found at Cushing Acad­ Class Agents: emy in Ashburnham, Mass., with Jamie Bruce C. Silvers, Esq. teaching English and coaching soccer Ruth Flaherty Beaton and lacrosse and Kirsten employed as the associate in development for spe­ cial writing projects. Jane Melvin Mattoon PAT FINN has a very devoted sister 83B Morris St. who provided us an update on her big H~ord,Conn.06114 bro (thanks, Ginny!). Pat was gradua­ ted magna cum laude from Western New England Law School and at the AMY SNYDER FORMAN is an attor­ time was studying for the bar. As of ney in Philadelphia. Sept. 30, he and hometown sweetheart, Last summer SUSAN GREENE was Carol Martinotti, are husband and wife appointed a member of the team that (see Weddings). represented the United States at the CHRIS GASKIN and Evelyn Pagan 13th World Maccabiah Games in Israel were married (see Weddings) in Wash­ in July. The Games are held every four ington, D.C. on Oct. 14. It was a great JEANNE KULEWICZ '81 and David Penn were married recently. years and pit Jewish athletes from all wedding blessed with beautiful Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (front row, I. tor.) Sidnie White over the world in competition similar weather. The old gang of JOHN KOCH­ ' 81, bride, Margaret Henderson '81; (back row, I. tor.) Timothy to that of the Olympics. Susan's sport is NOWICZ, JOE SffiELD, SCOTT SEN­ Martin '83, groom, Andrew Teitz '80, Alan Levine '80, Margie squash. NETT, JlM McAWON, the ZIMs, and Sheffield '82. EUZABETH HORTON is working on GABE HARRIS '87 were on hand to KATE RODGERS '87 and MAX SMITH '86 were married on June 17, 1989 in Long Island. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (front) Mike DiSandro '86; (first row) Peter Voudouris '87, Murphy Vand­ erVelde '87,John Montgomery '87, Scott Zoellner '87, Dave Banta '87, Steve Okun '86; (second row) Laura Danford '87, bride, ELIZABETH HESLOP '86 and THOMAS SHEEHY '86 were groom, J. D. Cregan '86; (standing) Phil Kingman '86, Cappy married on July 1, 1989 in Atherton, Calif. Trinity alumni/ae Flynn Daume '86, Sam Daume '86, Wendy Sheldon '87, Bill Det­ attending were: (first row, I. tor.) Bill Markowitz '86, Dan Palaz­ wiler '87, Tony Sirianni '87, Kevin Smith '87, Perry Troisi '86, zolo '84,Joslin Hubbard '86, bride, groom, Kim Crowley '86; (sec­ Randy Vyskocil '86, Ingrid Kotch '87, Lisa Cadette '87, Andy Filler ond row, I. to r.) Andy Hern '86, Margaret Figueroa '86, Lisa '87, Stephanie Levin '87, Isabelle Parsons Loring '87, Ian Loring Hoffman DePatie '86, Aileen Doherty '86, Marcy Lee '86,Jen Zyd­ '88, Christine Kelleher '86. ney '86, Jenny Davidoff '86, Katie Cook '86, Linda Bay '86, John Stratakis '86; (third row, I. tor.) Pete DePatie '86,Jay Gangi '86, Steve Hirshberg '86, Tom Dunn '86, Scott MacColl '86, Greg Car­ ter '86, Tom Madden '86.

BOB FLANAGAN '85 and Elaine Maloney were married on May 13, 1989. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (front row, I. to r.) Roger Esnard '87, Austin Keyes '87, Steve Gerber '87, Michael Bronzino '84; (back row,l. tor.) R. Scott Cassie '82, bride, groom, Jackie Kim '84, KenJurish '87.

ERICK KUCHAR '87 and Ellen Murdock were married on Oct. 1, 1989 in Methuen, Mass. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (I. tor.) Greg Richo '87, Maribeth FitzGerald '89, Artie FitzGerald '87, Mike Donovan '87, bride, groom, Skip DeCapua '87, Susan Picci­ notti (friend), Ted Moise '87, Lisa Muik '86.

KRISTER JOHNSON '85 and Malinda Eichner were married on June 17,1989 in Westport, Conn. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (first row, I. to r.) Joseph Wire '85, Stephen Gellman '85, David Barry '85, Stephen Klots '84; Paul Deslandes '87, Stephen Tall '84, David O'Donnell '85; (second row, I. tor.) Scott Hallett '85,Jona­ than Miller '85, Christina Gonzalez '85, Anne Malabre '85, Erika Thurman Merrill '85, Catherine Lewis '85, groom, bride, Anne Gurin Tall '84, Aileen Doherty '86.

wish Tardy and Ev well and play a little Office. As of September, Annie is study­ day - Alison is very busy! She notes job with the Men's Tennis Council and golf. After a honeymoon at the Cape, ing for an MA. in international rela­ that CATHY LEWIS will be a third is a world traveler. BETH BARNE'IT the Caskins will live in D.C. tions with a Middle East concentration roomie in their pad as of September. has returned from the Sotheby pro­ ANNIE PROCTOR has returned to at Johns Hopkins SAIS. Welcome back! NANCY OKUN receives the scoop gram in London and is now in decora­ the U.S. after a rewarding year of ALISON BERUNGER writes that she award with all of these updates: Nancy tive arts at ChristiesiN .Y.C. CRISS teaching English to Moroccans at the and MEG BISHOP are both working on is designing clothing for Christian Dior LEYDECKER recently moved to Nan­ American Language Center, Casa­ MA.s at NYU - Alison's in literature Sportswear and is putting her Parson's tucket where she plans to live for about blanca, and a one-month internship and Meg's in creative writing. Student School of Design degree to use. CAM­ one year. Criss was most recently in with the U.S. State Department USIS by night, P.R. account executive by ILLE GUTHRIE continues to er\ioy her the advertising department at Barney's. versity. She notes that her new position Whiting Lane School in West Hartford. nicely complements her work in de­ CARY LYFORD writes that she and velopment at the National Gallery and JOHN SELF are engaged. The wedding that she is "thrilled to stay in the arts." will take place in Denver on Feb. 3, Headliner 1990. Cary is an associate underwriter Class Agents: at Continental Insurance in Englewood, Michael Morris Colo. Elizabeth Heslop Sheehy DEBBIE UANG spent a "fabulous James Sickinger '86 has been year" in Taipei and returned to the awarded a Fulbright grant to con­ United States in May 1989. She has set­ duct research on the role of written Ellen Garrity tled down in Washington, D.C. where 221 Ridge Mede Rd., records in the democracy of classi­ she does editorial work for an interna­ #307 tional affairs journal. Debbie met Wuer cal Greece. He is studying at the Baltimore, Md. 21210 Kaixi, the Chinese student leader for American School of Classical democracy, in October. Studies at Athens, where he has PAUL ASTLE works for Xerox in Like YOUR FAITHFUL SECRETARY, been named the Honorary Hein­ Stamford, Conn. where he oversees all . ASHBY MANSON '86 has begun work rich Schliemann Fellow for 1989- of New York City's equity purchases of on his B.F.A. He is going to art school 90. He is a student in the doctoral Xerox products. He writes, "After a in southern California. program in classical philology at year and a half of this work I can DONNA JOYCE attends the George­ Brown University. Sickinger proudly say I now speak fluent bureau­ town University School of Law and earned his · B.A. in classics with crat." Paul also announces his engage­ lives in Alexandria, Va. ment to Judith Levine - "not of DEBBIE BARRASS and ALEX honors, graduating as salutatorian Trinity unfortunately." He has also WOODFORD also live in the Virginia and optimus of the Class of '86. heard that EVERETT SUSSMAN is en­ suburbs of our nation's capital and tering his final year of law school "and work in Washington, D.C. is having a fine time." JOANNE JACOBSON e(\joys living in JEANNE HOPKINS is in her third New York City while attending busi­ CHRIS ELLIOT writes that he is en- . mates at Young and Rubicam in New year at the New England College of Op­ ness school at Columbia University. joying Rhode Island and his recent pro­ York City. They cover both the automo­ tometry in Boston. She spent most of JULIE KIM continues to work for the motion to biomedical engineer in tive after-market and liquor industries. the summer on Cape Cod and writes Bank of New England in Boston. She orthopaedics at Davol, Inc. He has a "Don't worry," he says, "no drinking that "the Chatham Squire is always a loves Boston. message for MARC CHABOT: "Mis­ and driving here!" great place to run into people." News received from NAN TELLIER, age!!" (Must be a private joke.) VIRGINIA FINN DURKAN is a repre­ DAVID SMITH left his job as an engi­ formerly of the Alumni and College Re­ MARTIN BIHL writes that he's living sentative at Colonial Penn. in Phila­ neer at General Dynamics and is now lations Office at Trin: in Miami and recently landed a job in delphia. "wearing the blue and gold of the Uni­ "INGRID KOTCH has left her public personnel with Southern Air Transport Sam and JANE CAHILL FLOOD live versity of Michigan" where he has be­ relations job at Hill and Knowlton in which he describes as "the Federal Ex­ in New York City where she works for gun work on his M.B.A. NYC and is now a full-time student in press to Latin and South America." Mitchell Hutchins Assets Management TIMOTHY ANDERSON works at Columbia's pre-med program. Martin's very excited about the growth and Sam works for NBC (TV). They Aetna in Hartford. Oct. 1 marked his "ISABELLE PARSONS WRING left potential of this company and urges "run into" LISA GALLONE and SARAH one-year anniversary studying the Ko­ her job at the Bank Street School and is anyone interested in a position to look OMAN, and "have a great time visiting" rean martial art Tae Kwan Do at a now an admissions officer at Barnard him up. CYNTIDA BRYANT '84 plans to SUE and STEVE DONAGHY '85, school three blocks from Trinity. He College in NYC. join him shortly. SCOTT SENNETT '85 and TRACY MA­ writes that the 1990 Tae Kwan Do "PETER VOUDOURIS left his job at 53 BROOKE BALDRIDGE is a program­ GRUDER in Connecticut. championships will be held at Trinity in Fidelity in Boston and is now a first­ mer analyst at The Travelers and has The Department of the Navy has an­ March. Tim, GABE HARRIS, FRANK year law student at Case Western Uni­ - moved to Northbrook Court in East nounced that SCOTT GOWELL has NEWARK, ARTIE FITZGERALD and versity in Cleveland, Ohio. Hartford. been designated a Naval Aviator. PETER WORTHING met in Amherst, "GINNY VOGEL left her job in Bos­ JOSEPH LUNGHAMER lives in MIMI HALL is a reporter for USA Mass. recently to wish Peter "Happy ton in mid-Dec. to embark on an Royal Oak, Mich: and works for Joe Today. Trails" before going off to graduate around-the-world trek which will take Lunghamer Chevrolet. After going to France last spring, school at the University of Hawaii. her just about everywhere imaginable. ERICA THURMAN MERRILL is as­ STEVEN HIRSHBERG has taken his EWISE NURSE will graduate from "MURPHY VANDERVELDE left his sistant director of admissions at Co­ National Medical Boards, Part I, and is Temple University School of Law in job at Dean Witter in Hartford and is lumbia University. doing clinical medicine rotations at Philadelphia. She spent last summer in now a trader at Hellman Jordon Man­ CAROLINE COCO and SAM REID Boston City Hospital and other Boston Israel, studying at the Tel Aviv School agement in Boston. Murphy and 1 were are stockbrokers at H.C. Wainwright, hospitals. He says he "had a nice vaca­ of Law. married on Dec. 2. Trinity people in our 60 State Street, Boston. Between them tion in California" for ELIZABETH JAMiE HARPER - also in Philadel­ wedding party were JOHN MONT­ and an occasional lunch with AN­ HESWP and TOM SHEEHY's wedding. phia - has begun work on his mas­ GOMERY, PETER VOUDOURIS, DAVE NETTE and ALEC BURGER, they keep From December to January, he planned ter's degree in art history at the BOONE, INGRID KOTCH, USA CA­ up on the Trinity news. BROOKE to do a clinical rotation in scuba diving University of Pennsylvania. DETTE, and ISABELLE PARSONS SOUTHALL (Sam's roommate) can be and hyperbaric medicine at Duke U ni­ PAUL MORICO is in his third year of WRING. After our wedding, I left Trin­ found still rowing up and down the versity Medical School. law school at Columbia University. He ity and moved to Boston. As of the mo­ Charles River. He rows for the Union WRI LAUB is in the M.B.A. program was elected to the student senate this ment, I am unemployed. Yipes! And the Boat Club and works in Cambridge. at the University of North Carolina at spring. He spent the summer working thought of yet another job search filled That's all for now and please keep us Chapel Hill. as a summer associate for a patent law with cover letters, resumes and rejec­ updated on what you're doing. Thanks DOREEN RICE-BUTLER writes that firm in New York City. tion letters does not thrill me in the so much to all of you who wrote! she organized a fund-raising event at After graduating from the University slightest. Hope to see you at the Class 5th! the South Street Seaport Museum of Maryland Law School in the spring, "I recently received a letter from Class Agents: which raised $22,000 for the Museum. DIANE DEROS will start work at a SKIP DeCAPUA telling me of ERICK Elizabeth G. Cass TED WEESNER and KATE EKLUND large law firm in Washington, D.C. as an KUCHAR's Oct. 1 wedding to his high Miyukl Kaneko '88 were among the Trinity grads in at­ associate. school sweetheart, Ellen Murdock. Stephen J. Norton tendance. Doreen has begun a new job JOANNA FONE started law school at Skip proudly stood beside Kuch as the Reunion Clw.irs: as assistant director of development Georgia State in August. She left her best man at the wedding held in Meth­ Lee A. Coffin for Trinity School in New York City. present job with the Calibre Company uen, Mass., followed by a reception in Pamela W. von Seldeneck She also planned to begin graduate of Georgia in July. New Hampshire. In addition to the Lori Davis Shield study at N.Y.U. last fall. SUSAN DORMAN writes that she has other Trinity people (see wedding pic­ SAM SLAYMAKER received a juris "finally" started medical school at ture) at the festivities, LT. BRIAN DUR­ doctor degree from The Dickinson Duke University in Durham, N.C. KIN was there "in spirit." Skip Regina J. Bishop School of Law last June. CATHY YOUNG writes that she has explained that Brian is a first lieutenant 243 East 31st St. WILLIAM G. and HEATHER MOODY "moved back home with the parents to stationed in Okinawa, Japan. Although Apt. #5 THOMAS have moved to Charlottes­ save $ for graduate school." She will he was unable to attend the wedding, New York, N.Y. 10016 ville, Va. Will has begun graduate study begin studying Native American stud­ Skip read a toast for him in honor of in history at the University of Virginia. ies this January at the University of the bride and groom. Kuch and his TOM CRIMMINS writes that he and Heather is director of development for Michigan. bride went to Barbados for their hon­ MARTHA BUSH-BROWN are office- the School of Architecture at the Uni- BETH McDONALD is teaching at the eymoon. Skip says he's "finally" in his third year of law school at Georgetown tion in order to teach French and Span­ FIFFA TAFFURI '89 and EILEEN NEI­ 1976 University and is eagerly awaiting his ish at the high school level. Karen LAN '89. Last August at the West Hartford Li­ May graduation. Kuch formerly worked Tufankjian is as dedicated as ever to STEVEN DiSCIULLO is back to brary, ANNE HOROWITZ KNAPP coor­ at the Hartford Steamboiler Insurance her special needs children outiside of mainland U.S.A. after a stint in Alaska dinated an exhibit which traced the Company as an investment analyst, but Arlington. working for the phone company. He history of first ladies from Martha has since moved back to Methuen. He Speaking of teaching, RODNEY had a pretty good set-up from what I Washington to Nancy Reagan. now works as an investment analyst at MOORE and JIM STANLEY are teach­ hear and quite a different lifestyle - the Waltham Savings Bank in Waltham, ers at Kingswood-Oxford in Hartford. supplies were flown in by helicopter. 1982 Mass. Rodney is teaching science and Jim is a SEAN PADGET is planning to stay in NANCY DAVIS has been named co­ "SKIPPY REDMON BANKER has left history teacher. (l'here are rumors of Japan until this corning summer. He's ordinator of public information at Wat­ her job at Laura Ashley in New York coaching for both.) WENDY RAW­ having a fabulous experience but wants kinson School in Hartford. City, and has moved to Boston with UNGS is at Colorado State pursuing to continue his studies in the U.S. DENIS MAIORANI has been named husband ALEX BANKER '83. Skippy is her M.F.A. in creative writing and is CINDY DOKAS and BRIDGET Mc­ senior vice president-finance and ad­ now working at Harvard." teaching composition fundamentals to CORMACK are diligently studying their ministration at MIA-COM, Inc. in Bur­ Thanks to all of you who sent news freshmen. way through their second year at law lington, Mass. on to your faithful secretary. My apolo­ KIM COGSWELL is doing cardiovas­ school. Who said the first year was the gies to those of you whose mail was cular research in a Boston hospital. toughest? 1985 misplaced in the process of moving or JEN CAMPION is working as a para­ MARIA GULINO has moved into the TODD MARBLE, mathematics whose mail was not forwarded to my legal in Greenwich, Conn. and is dab­ West Village in NYC and is still with teacher at Kingswood-Oxford School in new address (see above). Confidential bling in some modeling jobs. Also Grey Advertising. West Hartford, has been named master to the individual in Boston who contin­ working as a paralegal is SARAH MA­ A great many of you still need to of the freshman class. ues to send me unsigned updates: Start LONEY. ANNlKA SMITH has returned come out of the woodwork and keep signing your mail and I'll start printing from an eight-month stint in Paris, me posted. It would make it easier to your news. I don't regard anonymous where she worked as a paralegal in a see it in writing rather than hearing it in tips highly. This is the Reporter, not French law firm. She is currently em­ bits and pieces. Please keep in touch. HONORARIUS the New York Daily News. ployed as assistant to the director of in­ Thanks and hope to hear from you ternational advertising at Conde Nast soon. Class Agents: International in New York City and Class Agents: 1985 Lisa Cadette writes that she sees Sarah often. Isobel A. Calvin Making Sense is the title of ELLEN Hope A. Williams KRISTEN GEBHARDT is a research Elizabeth E. Hardman GOODMAN's fourth book, which is a Edward B. Meyercord ill assistant at National Economic Re­ Bruce Hauptfnhrer collection of her syndicated columns search Assoc. in White Plains, N.Y. John Choon-Hyuk Lee spanning the past five years. SARAH DESPRES is in Russia con­ ducting a "tour" for which she was in­ tensely trained. Corinne N. Coppola USA ALVAREZ..CALDERON is en­ In Memory 151 E. 31st St., Apt. 12B joying the challenges of her new job as­ Yuichi P. Lee New York, N.Y. 10060 1481 60th St. signment in Chicago and is adapting to Brooklyn, N.Y. 11219 the midwestern style of living quite nicely. The drawback is the lack of REINHOLD ENOCH NORDLUND, 1922 Well, three weeks after this submis­ travel to the East Coast. MELANIE BROWN is a legal re­ sion to the Reporter, we'll all be at ANNE MONGILLO has been making search assistant with Provident Na­ Reinhold E. Nordlund of Venice, Fla. Homecoming and hopefully I'll get frequent trips to the Big Apple. She is tional Bank in Philadelphia, Pa. died on June 13, 1989. He was 89. more accurate info on those of you 54 planning to attend graduate school SHARON CODEANNE is financial Born in Hartford, Conn., he gradua­ who have neglected to tell me your sometime in the near future and is re­ aid assistant at Harvard University's ted from Hartford High School before - whereabouts. ceiving invaluable experience in re­ Graduate School of Design. attending Trinity where he was a mem­ Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. DON search at Yale. JENNIFER HALL is in her first year ber of Sigma Nu fraternity, the football FRONZAGLIA and Mr. and Mrs. SCOTT While vacationing in Florida mid­ of a clinical psychology Ph.D. program, and baseball teams, and the basketball BROWNELL, married within a week of October, ANN GRUNBECK and I spent and is working as a graduate assistant team which he captained his senior one another this fall. Coincidentally, time with JESSICA BROWNSTEIN. teaching introductory psychology labs year. He received his B.S. degree in both couples chose Hawaii for their When this is published, Jessica will at UConn. 1922. honeymoon spot. Various Trin alums probably have changed residence and MAJA LISA LUNDBORG is a chemis­ For 42 years he served as an accoun­ gathered for each occasion. her job, but for now she is working at try teacher at Miss Porter's School in tant for General Electric in Brighton, JOHN BURKE returned from his the Atlantic Club and living in Norwalk, Farmington, Conn. Mass. He retired in 1965 and moved to worldly escapades in time to be in at­ while taking a course in children's JUDITH SANDFORD attended the Florida 17 years ago. tendance for both weddings. MARCUS comparative literature. Radcliffe publishing course last sum­ He was a member of Belmont United MIGNONE and ERIK JOHNSON were CHRIS HARGES and PETE WEISS mer, started her job at Tra:vel-Holuroy Methodist Church in Belmont, Mass. ushers at Don and Diane's wedding. are living in the Boston vicinity and al­ in September, and, most recently, and Grace United Methodist Church in The Trinity alumni who were in atten­ though Pete submitted his new ad­ moved into an apartment on the upper Venice, Fla. He was a former president dance were the following: JOANNE dress, he and Chris are yet to inform East Side of New York. She will be as­ of the Belmont Retired Men's Club, and PALANDRO, HOLLY DAVOREN, me of their employment ventures. sisting in the art department at Travel­ held memberships in the Belmont-Bea­ KAREN TUFANKJIAN, USA GODEK, TARA UCHTENFELS has moved Holiday. ver Lodge, A.F. and A.M., and the Amer­ WENDY GOLDSTEIN, AMY HERREN, outside of D.C. to Maryland and had ican Association of Retired Persons. BILL CARROLL, BOB LOEBER, BRY­ Class Agents: some pretty painful foot surgery in Surviving are his wife, Helen M., of ANT McBRIDE, KEVIN ROBINSON, Joshua M. Bewlay early fall - rumors of having to dis­ Venice, Fla.; two sons, Reinhold E., Jr., MIKE ANDERSON, DAVE PROVOST, Susan E. Kinz pense of her footwear. Working for of Watertown, Mass., and RobertS., of KEVIN CHARLESTON, MARK PAL­ Donna F. Haghighat Congresswoman Kennelly can be Belmont, Mass.; a daughter, Jean Mag­ LADINO, BILL HOWLAND and JON pretty challenging, but she is ef\ioying nuson, of Albany, N.Y.; and two grand­ LEVIN. every minute of it, especially the brief children. Joanne is dat-'>ling in various affairs brushes with fame. with The Travt:lers in Danvers (any SUE TILL recently ef\ioyed a promo­ craving for D'Angelo's lately?). Wendy tion with the Water Commission this MASTERS is ef\ioying her job a great deal booking summer. LUCA E. H. CELENTANO, 1924 various firms. Bill Howland is happy UZ BREINER is getting prepared to basically being his own boss with Pru­ move into her own singles pad in Hart­ Luca E. H. Celentano of New Haven, dential Life in Boston. Bob Loeber has ford this fall. Her job at Arthur Ander­ 1969 Conn. died on Sept. I, 1989. He was 89. taken up residence in Hartford and has sen is going well. Last summer COLONEL ANTHONY Born in New Haven, Conn., he gradu­ been within View vicinity. It has been ROSS BURDICK is working at Trin­ SHOOKUS spent six days deep-sea ated from Hillhouse High School in that rumored that Bill Carroll has been ity Day Care and is waitering at a hip fishing and kayaking in Barclay Sound, city before attending Trinity where he spending a great deal of time hanging downtown Hartford establishment. Re­ off Vancouver Island in British Colum­ was manager of the baseball team, and out in New York's most exclusive tail wasn't his biz and he's much hap­ bia. He then biked south, traveling business manager of the Tripod and clubs - he can neve.r seem to get pier now. along the coasts of Washington, Ore­ the Ivy. He received his B.S. degree in enough. TIM STEELE and JIM PARMELEE gon and California and into Mexico. 1924, and in 1930 he was awarded his Holly Davoren is attending school moved in next door to some other Trin The trip covered 2,004 miles and took M.D. degree from Hahnernan Medical part-time to earn her master's in educa- alumni - LAUREN deLUCA '89, 64 days. College in Philadelphia, Pa. He was a private in the Army from In 1972 he was the recipient of the years and was a life member of the Dal­ Hartford and Springfield areas. In addi­ 1918-1919 and a commander in the Northern Middlesex Chamber of Com­ las Chamber of Commerce. tion, he was the founder of the Apex Navy Reserve from 194.3-1946. He had merce's Outstanding Citizen Award . Among his survivors are two neph­ Tool and Die Company in Hartford. been a member of the American Legion His participation in civic activities in­ ews, Dr. FrankS. Harrison, Jr., of Villa­ During his residency in Hartford, he since 1946. cluded membership in the board of di­ nova, Pa, and Thomas Harrison, of was actively involved in the area's Ital­ A lifelong resident of New Haven, he rectors of Middlesex Memorial Killara, Australia. ian cultural affairs. practiced general medicine at the Hos­ Hospital, the advisory board of Hart­ He leaves his wife, Miriam Cox Giuli­ pital of St. Raphael and Yale-New Ha­ ford National Bank, Trinity College ano, of Hartford; his mother, Antoinette ven Hospital for 57 years, working until Alumni Board, and the board of trust­ La Bruna Giuliano, of West Hartford; HORACE BARNARD IV, 1935 ill health forced his retirement last Feb­ ees of the YMCA. He was also a direc­ two sons, Vincent C., of Hartford, and ruary. He had also been on the staff of tor of the Connecticut Broadcasting Horace Barnard IV, age 77, of Lacey, Carmine J ., of West Hartford; a brother; Griffin Hospital from 1946-1970 and Association, a corporator of the Farm­ Wash. died on Oct. 31, 1988. He was a three grandchildren; and two great­ had served as medical director of the ers & Mechanics Savings Bank, a mem­ homicide victim. grandchildren. religious order, Little Sisters of the ber of the Haddam Planning & Zoning Born in Harrison, N.Y., he attended Poor. Commission, a director of the Chamber Trinity with the Class of 1935. He had been the state police surgeon of Commerce, and of the Goodspeed He leaves his wife, Mary Barnard, of STANLEY DAVIS WOODWORTH, 1943 since 1966 and the city's fire surgeon. Opera House. He was a past president Lacey, Wash. He had been medical director of the of the Middlesex United Fund and of Stanley D. Woodworth of Carpin­ Hamden Health Care Facility since the Rotary Club. He was active in the teria, Calif. died on July 14, 1989. He 1980 and of Golden Manor Convales­ Republican Party in Middlesex County. was 67. cent Home from 1968 to 1981. Among his survivors is his wife, Be­ FREDERICK ANDERSON Born in Lynn, Mass., he graduated His appointments by New Haven atrice Torgan O'Brien, of Middletown, CALDERWOOD, JR., 1937 from St. Andrew's School in Middle­ mayors to commissions included the Conn. town, Del. before attending Trinity Civil Defense Policy Board, the New Frederick A. Calderwood, Jr. of Mad­ ison, Conn. died on Sept. 13, 1989. He where he was a member and president Haven boards of health, education and of Psi Upsilon fraternity, a member of police commissioners. In 1967 he was was 76. JAMES FREDERICK AMMERMAN, Born in Boston, Mass., he graduated the varsity squash team and the inter­ honored by then-Mayor Richard Lee for fraternity council. He received his B.A. 35 years of community service. 1927 from Pittsfield High School in Pittsfield, Mass. before attending Trinity where degree in 1943. In 1953 and 1967, re­ He had been chairman of the public James F. Ammerman of El Paso, spectively, he received M.A. degrees relations committees of the New Haven he was a member of Alpha Chi Rho fra­ Texas died on March 16, 1989. He was ternity and Pi Gamma Mu honorary so­ from Middlebury College. In 1957 he re­ Medical Association, the New Haven 84. ceived the degree of Docteur de L'Uni­ County Medical Association and the ciety. He received his B.S. degree in Born in Clearfield, Pa, he graduated 1937. versite de Paris. Connecticut State Medical Society. from high school there before attend­ He accepted a position as head of His memberships included the Upon graduation, he joined the Con­ ing Trinity with the Class of 1927. At necticut General Life Insurance Com­ modem languages at The Cate School House of Delegates State Medical Soci­ Trinity he was a member of Delta Psi in Carpinteria, Calif. in 1948. He retired ety, the bylaws committee of the New pany in Bloomfield, Conn. From 1943 fraternity. In 1930 he graduated from until his discharge in 1946, he was in in 1988 having served the School in vir­ Haven County Medical Society which the United States Military Academy. tually every teaching and administra­ he served as chairman, and the boards the U.S. Army. In 1978 he retired from Commissioned in field artillery, he Connecticut General where he was a tive capacity. For the past 19 years he of the New Haven City Medical Associ­ served with artillery units and was an was director of studies which included ation and the New Haven County Medi­ second vice president. He had been instructor at West Point. employed there for over 40 years. leading the curriculum committee to cal Society. During World War 11 he served in the define the School's goals. He became The recipient of numerous awards Formerly of West Simsbury and Far­ southwest Pacific, the Philippines and mington, Conn., he was past president senior master in 1976. His book, GUul and honors, he had the pediatric unit of Japan. He was assigned to the Joint to Rem.em.ber, had The Cate School as St. Raphael's Hospital named for him. of the Simsbury Civitan Club. He had 55 Chiefs of Staff under General Omar lived in Madison since 1978. its setting. An endowed teaching chair Most recently he received the Humani­ Bradley during the Korean War. has been established in his name. tarian Award for Hunger Relief and De­ He leaves his wife, Carol Marshburn - Other assignments included stints as Among his survivors are his wife, velopment; the Knights of Honor and Calderwood, of Madison, Conn.; a son, president of the Field Artillery Board in David, of Dumfries, Va; a daughter, Elizabeth Webb Woodworth, of Car­ St. Gregory, awarded by the Hartford Fort Sill, Okla, commanding general of pinteria, Calif.; five children; and seven Archdiocese; and was named a Melvin Faith Amoroso, of Randolph, N.J.; a the Army Section Military Assistance brother; a sister; and a grandson. grandchildren. Jones Fellow by the Lions Clubs Inter­ Advisory Group in Greece, and assis­ national Foundation. tant commander of the 1st Cavalry He is survived by his wife of 55 years, Division in South Korea. His last as­ Dr. Jean Hippolitus Celentano, of New EUGENE THOMAS KELLY, 1947 signment was with the 35th Air De­ JAMES FRANCIS DONOHUE, 1937 Haven, Conn.; two nieces; two neph­ fense Brigade at Fort Meade, Md. ews; and 14 great-nieces and nephews. Eugene T. Kelly of Manchester, He retired in 1960 and accepted a James F. Donohue of Peachtree City, Conn. died on Nov. 1, 1989. He was 69. managerial position with Westinghouse Ga died on Aug. 20, 1989. He was 73. Born in Manchester, he graduated Defense Center in Baltimore, Md. Retir­ Born in Hartford, Conn., he gradua­ RICHARD JAMES O'BRIEN, 1926 from New Britain High School in New ing for the second time, he moved to El ted from the Loomis School in Windsor, Britain, Conn. before attending Trinity Richard J. O'Brien of Middletown, Paso, Texas in 1967. Cotm. before attending Trinity. He re­ with the Class of 1947. Subsequently, Conn. died on February 4, 1989. He was He leaves his wife, Dorothy Moore ceived his B.S. degree in 1937. he received his LL.B. degree from the 84. Ammerman, of El Paso, Texas; and his A World War 11 veteran, he served as University of Connecticut School of Born in Middletown, Conn., he grad­ son, Dr. Frederick W. Ammerman. a Naval officer in the South Pacific. Law in 1951. uated from the Suffield School in Suf­ Before retiring in 1972, he was chief A U.S. Navy veteran, he served as field, Conn., before attending Trinity statistician for the Communicable Dis­ chief yeoman in both the Atlantic and ease Control Center in Atlanta, Ga. with the Class of 1926. At Trinity he ALFRED PALMORE HARRISON, 1931 Pacific from 1942-1945. was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity Surviving are his wife, Mary Dailey From 1958 to 1960 he was mayor of and captain of the football team. A. Palmore Harrison of Dallas, Texas Donohue, of Peachtree City, Ga; two Manchester, and from 1962-1964 he During World War II he was in the died on Sept. 5, 1989. He was 85. daughters, Margaret D. Brand, of Long­ was a director and president of that U.S. Air Force and received the Bronze Born in Philadelphia, Pa., he gradua­ mont, Colo., and Irene D. Jurczyk, of city's Chamber of Commerce. Star and the Unit Presidential Citation. ted from Brown Preparatory School in Atlanta, Ga; a brother; three sisters; six In 1960 he was appointed chief pros­ He was recalled for the war in Korea that city before attending Trinity where grandchildren; and 11 step-great-grand­ ecutor of the Twelfth Circuit Court and and served as a lieutenant-colonel with he was a member of Alpha Chi Rho fra­ children. in 1976 he was appointed a Superior the 314 Bomb Wing of the 20th Air ternity. He received his BA. degree in Court Judge. He was appointed the Ad­ Force. 1932. He received his bachelor of theol­ ministrative Judge of the Tolland Judi­ After several years in the insurance ogy degree in 1935 and his master of JOSEPH GIULlANO, 1937 cial District and in 1983 he was made field, he became vice president of divinity degree in 1971, both from Phil­ Administrative Judge of the Windham Bankers Life Insurance Company of adelphia Divinity School. In 1935 he Joseph Giuliano of Avon Park, Fla Judicial District. Montclair, N.J. Upon his resignation was ordained a priest in the Episcopal died on Sept. 17, 1989. He was 75. He was an honorary trustee of Man­ from this Company, he entered the Church. Born in Norfolk, Conn., he graduated chester Memorial Hospital. broadcasting business in 1948 with his He had served churches in German­ from the Classical Lyceum in Catania, Surviving are his wife, Virginia R. brother, William, and was named presi­ town, Pa., Williamstown, W. Va., and Italy, before attending Trinity. He re­ Sewell Kelly, of Manchester, Conn.; six dent of the Middlesex Broadcasting Wethersfield, Conn. In 1964 he retired ceived his BA. degree in 1937. daughters, Kathleen Turgeon, of Man­ Co., operating station WCNX in Mid­ from the ministry. After graduating he became a devel­ chester, N.H., Susan Sheckley, of Wind­ dletown. He lived in Dallas, Texas for many oper of apartment buildings in the ham, Conn., Judith Ferguson, of Clemson, S.C., Patricia Kelly-Patruno, before attending Trinity where he re­ of Naples, Italy, Mary Beatty, of Barre, ceived his BA degree in 1955. 1n 1960 DEBORAH FISH TAYLOR, 1980 HONORARIUS Vt., and Sharon Corbet, of Columbia, he received his master's degree in edu­ Conn.; and 10 grandchildren. cation from the University of Hartford. Deborah F. Taylor of Modesto, Calif. He was a U.S. Air Force veteran of died suddenly in an automobile acci­ VERNON DAVIS ROOSA, HON. 1967 the Korean War. dent on April 21, 1989. She was 30. Her son, Michael, was also killed in the ac­ WALTER TIMOTHY SULLIVAN, 1950 He was employed by the East Hart­ Vernon D. Roosa of West Hartford, ford Board of Education where he be­ cident. Walter T. Sullivan of Fairfield, Conn. Conn., a

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TRINITY •COLLEGE For further information, Larry Duffy, Director of Development Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106 (203) 297-2127 Mr. Peter J. Knapp 20 Buena Vista Rd. W. Hartford, CT 06107 current students and faculty Who Was --···-···---- .cions for the BrowneU Prize for ExceUence in Teaching, which will be awarded for the third time at Com­ Your Best mencement on May 27. Created in 1986 through an endowment gift from an alumnus and named Teacher at for the first president ofTrinity, Thomas Church Brownell, the Prize is given biennially to a senior faculty member who has compiled an outstand­ Trinity? ing record of effectiveness as a classroom teacher. The Prize carries an annual stipend of 2500. The first recipient of the Brownell Prize was Robert C. Stewart, the Charles A. Dana Professor of Mathematics, and the second was Diane C. Zannoni, professor of economics. They were pr6ented the award at the 1986 and 1988 Commencements, respectively. Those wishing to nominate a faculty member should send a short (500- word maximum) statement specifying the nominee's qualifications to: Dr. Jan K. Cohn, Dean of the Faculty, Williams Mc;morial, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 06106. The deadline for receipt of nominations is March 5, 1990. Any current faculty member at the rank of associate professor or professor who has taught at the College for at least ten years and will not retire prior to June, 1992, may be nominated for the Prize. (For ease of reference, the names of all eligible faculty are listed below.) Questions about eligibility or the nomination process may be referred to Ms. Elaine Garrahy, Assistant to the Dean of Faculty, at (203) 297-2128. The Prize is awarded by the Dean of the Faculty upon the recommenda­ tion of a small committee composed of three faculty members (including the two previous Prize recipients), three seniors drawn from the President's Fel­ lows, and the Associate Academic Dean. In announcing that nominations for the 1990 award are now open, Dean Cohn commented: "Given Trinity's long tradition of distinguished teach­ ing, it is a singular honor for a faculty member to be chosen for the BrowneU ., Prize. I urge members of the College community, including our graduates, to help with the selection process by nominating deserving faculty members."

The faculty members eligible for the Brownell Prize in 1990 are:

David Ahlgren Ellison B. Findly Dirk Kuyk Thomas A. Reilly Dina L. Anselmi Donald B. Galbraith Helen Lang Milia B. Riggio Philip C. F. Bankwitz John S. Gettier Eugene E. Leach David A. Robbins Andrea Bianchini Andrew J. Gold Randolph M . Lee Michael P. Sacks James R. Bradley Alden R. Gordon RichardT. Lee August E. Sapega John D. Brewer Alonzo G. Grace, Jr. Sonia Lee Craig W. Schneider Robert H. Brewer Gerald Gunderson Charles W. Lindsey Charles B. Schultz Joseph D. Bronzino Karl F. Haberlandt Kenneth Lloyd-Jones Robin Sheppard W. Miller Brown Richard J. Hazelton William M. Mace Robert E. Shults Noreen Channels James K. Heeren Anthony D. Macro John E. Simmons George Chaplin David E. Henderson Michael R. T. Mahoney Edward W. Sloan Frank M. Child Sharon D. Herzberger Clyde D. McKee Paul Smith Richard B. Crawford George C. Higgins, Jr. Chester H. McPhee H. McKim Steele, Jr. Ward S. Curran Donald D. Hook Charles R. Miller Ranbir Vohra Howard DeLong Albert J. Howard, Jr. Donald G. Miller Ralph E. Walde Henry A. DePhillips, Jr. Dianne Hunter James A. Miller James L. West Leslie Desmangles Drew A. Hyland Gerald Moshell James H . Wheatley LeRoy Dunn Samuel D. Kassow Ralph 0. Moyer E. Finlay Whittlesey Judy Dworin Dori Katz Hugh S. Ogden John C. Williams Francis J. Egan Arnold Kerson Borden W. Painter, Jr. David Winer Diana Evans Frank Kirkpatrick Harvey S. Picker