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12-1-1964 Trinity College Bulletin, 1963-1964 (Report of the Dean) Trinity College

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Recommended Citation Trinity College, "Trinity College Bulletin, 1963-1964 (Report of the Dean)" (1964). Trinity College Bulletins and Catalogues. 264. http://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/bulletin/264

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Trinity serial publications (1850 - present) at Trinity College Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Trinity College Bulletins and Catalogues by an authorized administrator of Trinity College Digital Repository. MAR 1 1965

HART~ ' U.h1 >, \...,ONN, EPORT OF THE DEAN r the Academic Year 1963-1964 The Corporation

ALBERT CHARLES JACOBS, LL.D., President* Hartford LYMAN BUSHNELL BRAINERD, B.A., Vice Chairman* Hartford ARNOLD HENRY MOSES, B.A., Secretary* Hartford , JEROME PIERCE WEBSTER, M.D. * New York, N.Y. JOHN RICHARD COOK, B.S. * Hartford KARL WILLIAM HALLDEN, SC.D. * Thomastm JOHN REINHART REITEMEYER, B.A. Hartford THE RT. REV. WALTER HENRY GRAY, S.T.D. Hartford GEORGE KEITH FUNSTON, L.H.D. * New York, N.Y RAYMOND JOHN WEAN, SC.D. Warren, OhMl HENRY SAMUEL BEERS, B.A. * Glastonbury OSTROM ENDERS, B.A. AYm GEORGE MALLETTE FERRIS, B.A. Washington, D.C. ALLERTON CUSHMAN HICKMOTT, LITT.D. West Hartford GEORGE WARREN WYCKOFF, B.A. * Pittsburgh, Pa. VERTREES YOUNG, B .. Bogalusa, la. BARCLAY SHAW, LL.B. * Chappaqua, N.Y. GLOVER JOHNSON, LL.D. * New York, N.Y DANIEL ALPERT, SC.D. Urbana, m JOHN KAPP CLARK, SC.D. Philadelphia, Pa. WILLIAM PERSONS GWINN, SC.D. * Hartford SEYMOUR EWING SMITH, B.S. Hartford HARRIS KING PRIOR, D.F .A. t Rochester, N.Y CHARLES THOMAS KINGSTON, JR., B.S. t Hartford THEODORE DAVIDGE LOCKWOODt Schenectady, N.Y

ARTHUR H. HUGHES, PH.D., Vice President ALBERT E. HOLLAND, M.A., Vice President J. KENNETH ROBERTSON, M.B.A., Treamrer and Comptroller

TRUSTEES EMERITI EDGAR FRANCIS WATERMAN, LL.D. Hartfmd THOMAS WRIGHT RUSSELL, B.A. Hartfmd JAMES LEWIS THOMSON, PH.B. West Hartfmd GEORGE STANLEY STEVENSON, LL.D. New Haven JOSEPH CAMPBELL, LL.D. Washington, D.C. BERN BUDD, LL.D. Scarsdale .Y JAMES LIPPINCOTT GOODWIN, LL.D. Hartford MARTIN WITHINGTON CLEMENT, D.ENG., LL.D. Philadelphia, Pa. ROBERT BARNARD O'CONNOR, D.F.A. New York, N.Y ROBERT SEYMOUR MORRIS, M.S. Hartfmd * These members of the Board form the Executive Committee. t Elected by the Alumni. Report of the Dean

TO THE PRESIDENT OF TRINITY COLLEGE: SIR: In accordance with custom, I have the honor to present herewith the following report regarding the academic year 1963-1964 at Trinity College. FACULTY There were 122 members of the faculty of Trinity College last year. Of these, 107 were full-time teachers and 15 were part-time. The part­ time staff represented the equivalent of 7 full-time teaching loads, and our faculty was thus equivalent in number to 114 members, an increase of 5 when compared with the previous year. Taking cogn~zance of the teaching assignments of our staff in the graduate program, the ratio of students to faculty members was 13.2 to one. The teaching loads and highest earned degrees of the faculty were as follows: Academic Load Full Part Highest Earned Degree Time Time (Total) Dr. M. Bach. None Professor ...... 29 2 (31) 22 6 1 2 Associate Professor ...... 36 2 (38) 27 11 Assistant Professor ...... 22 (22) 12 7 2 1 Instructor ...... 18 2 (20) 5 12 3 Lecturer...... 2 9 (11) 5 5 1 Total ...... 107 15 (122) 71 41 7 3 Thus, 58.3% of the faculty had earned doctorates and an additional 33.6% had Master's degrees. The exceptions occur, generally speaking, among those who teach subjects in which advanced degrees are not usually required or in the cases of young men who are at work on their doctoral dissertions while holding teaching positions. Sabbatical leaves were granted to the following: Mr. John A. Dando, Associate Professor of English, Christmas Term, for Shakespeare studies and for work on a small volume of his "Voice of America" radio scripts

1 in preparation for publication; Dr. Philip C. F. Bankwitz, Associate Pro­ fessor of History, Trinity Term, to consult official archives and private records in Paris and Strasbourg, France, and in various places in Western Germany dealing with the question of collaboration with and resistance to the German occupation of Alsace between 1940 and 1945; Dr. Stephen P. Hoffman, Jr., Associate Professor of Mathematics, academic year, to work on completion of an Advanced Calculus text and to begin a graduate· level Real Variables book and try a few experiments in programmed learning at various levels; Dr. Michael R. Campo, Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Trinity Term, to complete research in Italy on two works in progress: 1) an evaluation of the Pirandellian "Teatro degli Undid," and 2) a study of the theme of the "Resistance" in Italian litm· ture; Dr. Robert P. Waterman, Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Christmas Term, for the continuation of a study begun by the late Pro­ fessor Raymond T. Will of Yale, collecting and editing examples of the "farced epistle" and for research in France on the Mediaeval French Theatre; Mr. Clarence E. Watters, Professor of Music and Organist, Christmas Term, to work on the recording of Marcel Dupre's compositions. Leaves of absence were held by Dr. Kenneth W. Cameron, Associate Pro­ fessor of English, academic year, to do research at Harvard University for editing an important Thoreau manuscript, a privilege granted to him by Harvard; Mr. Stephen Minot, Assistant Professor of English, Trinity Term, to complete a novel, a series of related short stories, and a creative writing text, which Prentice-Hall has agreed to publish. The following eighteen names appear in the faculty list for the first time in 1963-1964: Gerald Roy Marshall, Lt. Col., USAF, B.A., Professor of Air Science Henry Alfred DePhillips, Jr., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry John Brian Grasser, Captain, USAF, Assistant Professor of Air Science Laurence Richard Alvarez, M.A., Instructor in Mathematics George Doskow, M.A., Instructor in English William Arnold Glasser, M.A., Instructor in English George Clinton Higgins, Jr., Ph.D., Instructor in Psychology and College Counselor Victor Meyers, M.S., Instructor in Mathematics Borden Winslow Painter, Jr., M.A., Instructor in History, Trinity Term Robb Nichols Russell, M.S., Instructor in Engineering Edward William Sloan, III, Ph.D., Instructor in History James Andrew Vaccaro, B.A., Instructor in Modern Languages Robert Fred Berkey, Ph.D., Lecturer in Religion William Lee Bradley, Ph.D., Lecturer in Religion Stephen Decatur Crites, Ph.D., Lecturer in Religion James Lincoln Palsgrove, III, Mus.M., Lecturer in Music, Christmas Term Robert S. Paul, Ph.D., Lecturer in Religion Alfred Louis Peiker, Ph.D., Lecturer in Chemistry The following names, included in the list of 1962-1963, do not appear in the list for 1963-1964, through expiration of term, or death, or retire­ ment, or resignation: Richard Bartlett Olney, Lt. Col., USAF, M.A., Professor of Air Science Vernon LeRoy Ferwerda, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Government John Francis LaMar, Major, USAF, M.A., Associate Professor of Air Science Alvin Richard Reinhart, B.S., Assistant Professor of Engineering William Alexander Johnson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Religion Raymond Fletcher Snipes, M.S., Instructor in Chemistry

2 David Solomon Salsburg, B.A., Instructor in Mathematics Peter L. Berger, Ph.D., Lectiirer in Religion Fred Denbeaux, S.T.M., Lecturer in Religion Harvey K. McArthur, Ph.D., Lecturer in Religion Changes in rank were as follows, the new title being included in each ce: LeRoy Dunn, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Economics Mario Joseph Poliferno, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics Austin Claud Herschberger, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Psychology Stephen Minot, M.A., Assistant Professor of English Donald Barrett Galbraith, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology Richard Thomas Lee, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy The retirement of Dr. Sterling B. Smith, Scovill Professor of Chemis­ try, deserves more than passing comment. He has been for forty years a pc>EUlar and devoted teacher who will be remembered as a person who maerstood his students as well as his subject. His skill and patience inspired many to choose Chemistry as a career. In addition to the publications and programs of research that are to be found in the reports of the various academic departments, the following pts to members of the Trinity faculty supported research here during the academic year 1963-1964: Edward Bobko NSF GE 2741 $1,000 J. Wendell Burger NIH RG 7458 4,617 Henry A. DePhillips, Jr. Research Corp. 5,000 Donald B. Galbraith NIH GM 12269-01 approved James K. Heeren Research Corp. approved Austin C. Herschberger NSF G 22795 5,690 Walter J. Klimczak NSF G 8237 84 Robert Lindsay NSF G 10114, GP 2512 723 James M. Van Stone NIH B 1705 8,353 $25,467 Similar grants were made to the Physics Department for the purchase of equipment for its new quarters. The academic business of the faculty was carried on in nine stated meetings and one special meeting, as well as by the activities of thirteen standing and .five ad hoc committees. The cumulative total of committee meetings on record is 43. The Dean's Advisory Committee met regularly at luncheons. Among the topics discussed at length were probation regulations, implementation of the new curriculum, honors courses and programs, the college calendar, letter grades, addition and deletion of courses, advising and counseling, farulty evaluation, course and half-course problems, appointment policy, and the teaching load. STUDENTS The principal extra-curricular activities came through the year in a thriving condition. The Student Senate, the only group which truly represents the whole student body, was efficient and unusually diligent, and the Medusa performed its disciplinary functions well and impartially. Of course the perennial questions were raised concerning the scope and source of its powers.

3 A student who was a campus leader last year undertook to slllllllU1'iJe for me the events that the student body looked on as outstanding from its point of view. They were: winning season of the soccer team; the dedia· tion of the Science Center; Ralph Allen's trial; the changes in the parking and automobile regulations; .the South African controversy; the Senate course evaluation; the refusal of the students to support the Honor Code; the records of the freshman basketball and baseball teams; the memorial service for President Kennedy; the discussion of required relegious ob­ servance; the visit of Karl Shapiro; the series of automobile accidents; the resignation of Dean 0. Wilson Lacy. With respect to Dr. Lacy's resignation, I should like to take this oppor· tunity to express publicly my admiration for the unselfish and devoted service that he has given so freely to Trinity College during the last six years. In addition to his continuing part-time duties as Associate Pro­ fessor of Psychology, Dean Lacy has been available and often active oo a round-the-dock basis seven days a week in his capacity as Dean of Students. He has shown indefatigable zeal and, moreover, he has been effective, successful, and popular, as one student after another will testify. Dr. Lacy can look back with pride on his record as Dean. I venture to reiterate here a point I have stressed in the past and which still causes me some concern, namely, the material welfare of our foreisn students, especially those who are brought to Trinity on full tuition schol· arships and with free board and lodging. They are usually impecunious and are more often than not cases of real need during protracted vacatim periods, since their summer jobs, if any, are generally not sufficient for their financial requirements. Despite the help given by other organizatioos from time to time, the College must stand in loco parentis to these young men for 365 days in a year. Furthermore, it would be wise to insist that each foreign student give evidence upon admission to college that he carries adequate health and accident insurance. The Class of 1964 was graduated on June 14th, having suffered an "attrition" of 24.3%. As has been typical during the past decade, one oot of every four students fails to receive his degree with his classmates. To be sure, the ratio will change to one in five if we consider those who are still in college and who will probably qualify for their degrees in the coming year. There were 272 young men present when the Class of 1964 first met in September, 1960, and 206, or 7?.7%, received degrees m Commencement Day this year. Another figure ran true to form. One out of every five of the under· graduate students who are granted degrees at the June exercises is "out of step" and was not from the start a member of the graduating class. Most of them are students who have needed five years rather than four. Those who have finished in three years constitute merely a trickle - 4 at the last graduation. The second largest group of this sort is made up of students who joined the graduating class by transfer from some other instituti(ll. There were 257 baccalaureates (not counting the fifth-year engineering degrees) and they were awarded to: 4 originally in the Class of 1965 1 originally in the Class of 1960 206 originally in the Class of 1964 1 originally in the Class of 19,9 26 originally in the Class of 1963 3 originally in the Class of ms 7 originally in the Class of 1962 8 who entered Trinity by transfer 1 originally in the Class of 1961 4 From The Academic Record

COURSE CHANGES Courses Added and Dropped, 1963-64 Added: Economics 572 - Managerial Accounting Government 304 - American Political Thought Government 309 - Congress and the Legislative Process Government 311 - Administration and Public Policy Government 313 - International Law Government 315 - History of Political Thought: Machiavelli to Burke Government 504 - American Political Thought Government 509 - Congress and the Legislative Process History 303 - Renaissance and Reformation History 305-Expansion of Europe History 309 - The Rise of Modern Russia History 318 -America in the Twentieth Century Italian 371 - Dante and The Divine Comedy Mathematics 406 - Introduction to Algebraic Topology Philosophy 207-208 - Introduction to Philosophy Physics 517 - Plasma Physics Dropped: Government 306 - Problems of National Security Government 524 - Promlems of National Security History 303 -The Renaissance in Italy History 304 - The Renaissance, Spain, Germany, Scandinavia History 305-Germany in the Age of the Reformation · History 306 - The Continental Reformation Outside Germany History 309 - Imperial Russia History 310-The Rise of Modern Russia History 405-406 - Thesis Mathematics 204 - Projective Geometry Mathematics 404 - Modern Algebra

STUDENTS Registration Enrollments for the last five years as of September have been: 19.59-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 984 985 1012 1044 1030

5 By Class: 1963-64 Non- Non- Undergraduates Resident Resident Veteran Veteran TolJ Freshmen ···· ·· ······· ···· ···· ········· 234 23 0 257 257 Sophomores ...... 244 2·6 3 267 270 Juniors ...... 212 35 2 245 247 Seniors ...... 201 46 6 241 247 Special Students ...... 0 4 0 4 4 5-Y ear Engineering ...... 1 4 0 5 5 Total Day Session ...... 892 138 11 1019 1030 Evening Session Graduate ...... 0 456 11 445 456 Undergraduates ...... 0 47 0 47 47

Total Evening Session ...... 0 503 11 492 •503 *136 are women, of whom 4 are undergraduates. Evening Session (less 40 Trinity undergraduates) .... 0 463 11 452

Grand Totals 892 601 22 1471 1493

Geo graphical Distribution No. Per- No. p,,. 4-yr. 5-yr. centage 4-yr. 5-yr. tt114p Alabama ...... 1 .10 New Hampshire .. 5 .49 California ...... 14 1.36 New Jersey ...... 93 9.03 Colorado 5 .49 New York ...... 158 1H4 295 3 28.93 North Carolina ... . 4 .39 Greater Hartford (113) (10.97) Ohio ...... 37 3.59 Rest of State ...... (182) (3) (17.96) Oklahoma ...... 1 .10 Delaware ...... 8 .78 Oregon ...... 3 .29 Dist. of Pennsylvania ...... 107 2 10.58 Columbia ...... 16 1.55 Rhode Island ...... 6 .SS Florida ······· ········· 6 .58 South Carolina .. .. 2 .19 Hawaii ...... 3 .29 Tennessee ...... 2 .19 Illinois ...... 50 4.85 Texas ...... 3 .29 Indiana ...... 3 .29 Utah ····· ··············· 3 ,29 Iowa ...... 3 .29 Vermont ...... 1 .10 Kansas ··· ·· ···· ······ · 1 .10 Virginia 13 1.26 Kentucky 7 .68 Washington ...... 2 .19 Maine ...... 3 .29 West Virginia ...... 1 .10 Maryland 37 3.59 Wisconsin ...... 6 .58 Massachusetts .... 81 7.86 Wyoming 1 .10 Michigan ······ ······ 8 .78 *Foreign Countries Minnesota 8 .78 U.S. citizens with Missouri ...... 10 .97 families living Montana ...... 1 .10 abroad ...... (3) Nebraska 1 .10 Foreign Nevada ...... 1 .10 Students (12) 15 1.46 Total ...... 1030 100.00I *Argentina; Austria; El Salvador; Gambia; Greece; Jordan; Kenya; Mexico; Nyasaland; Singapore; Switzerland; Venezuela. No. Percentage 4 yr. 5 yr. of Total Total from Public Schools ...... 564 2 54.95 Total from Private Schools ...... 461 3 45.05

6 Living Accommodations Married and living off campus ...... 22 Unmarried and living at home ...... 94 Non-Resident unmarried students not living at home but renting rooms off campus ...... 22

Total Non-Resident Students ...... 138 t Living in College dormitories or the Infirmary (ex- cluding Ogilby Hall) ...... 791 1 Living in Fraternity or Club Buildings Alpha Chi Rho ...... 17 ~;g~~efte~fuG~~ .. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~ Delta Kappa Epsilon ...... 8 Delta Phi ...... 11 Delta Psi (Ogilby Hall) ...... 28 Phi Kappa Psi ...... 0 Pi Kappa Alpha ...... 10 Psi Upsilon ...... 12 Q. E. D...... 0 Sigma Nu...... 13 Theta Xi ...... 0

Total Resident Students ...... 892 f ollll Students ...... 1030 Number of Upperclassmen by Major Subjects B.A. Curricula B.S. Curricula lA. General ...... 4 Biology ...... 37 Classics ...... 10 Chemistry ...... 27 Eronomics ...... 107 Engineering, 4 years ...... 3 3 Education ...... 1 Engineering, 5th year ( 4 Mech., Inglish ...... 101 1 Elec.) ...... 5 Fine .Arts ...... 30 Geology ...... 1 lleoch ...... 3 Interdepartmental ...... 4 German ...... 7 Mathematics ...... 3 5 Government ...... 49 Physics ...... 14 History ...... 145 Pre-Medical ...... 73 Interdepartmental ...... 2 Psychology ...... 9 Modern Languages ...... 19 Music ...... 5 Total B.S ...... 238 Jlbilosopby ...... 11 Grand Total ...... 820 32 =~~~ 24 lomance Languages.. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ...... :: . 1 Undecided ...... 31

Total B.A ...... 582 Grades During the past five years the average grades of the undergraduate student liody have been: 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 Grilles in percent 76.3 76.8 77.5 77.9 78.4 The records of the various groups of the student body in 1963-64 were as follows: ltsident ...... 78.3 Fraternity Members ...... 79.3 Noa-Resident ...... 78.1 Independents (ind. Brownell Club) 77.5 Upperclassmen ...... 79 .2 Married Students ...... 79.8 Fmhmen ...... 75.8 Single Students ...... 78.3

7 Fraternity and Club Standings for the Year Q. E. D ...... 81.60 Phi Kappa Psi ...... 78M Alpha Chi Rho ...... 80.51 Alpha Delta Phi ...... 7~ Pi Kappa Alpha ...... 80.38 DSigelmtaa PNhu. •••.•.•.•..... ·.•.·.·.•.·.·.. · .... .·· .·.·. ·.·. ·.·.·. ·.·.·.·.. · .... ·.·.·.·.·. 7 ~ Theta Xi ...... 80.37 1 7°"' ~~:n~!p;~u~p~ii°~~· :::::::::::::::::::: ~~:~~ i:;lt~P;!~o~. .. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: f~

Distribution of Grades, Past Five Years Total Grades (Actual Numbers) June A B c D F TotJ 1960 519 1662 1682 690 164 471 1961 531 1776 1719 641 137 4804 1962 543 1814 1821 589 102 48$ 1963 543 2050 1796 472 92 4953 1964 634 1976 1588 436 70 4704

Total 2770 9278 8606 2828 565 24047

Percentage of A's, B's, C's, D's, F's June A B c D F TotJ 1960 11.d 35.2 35.7 14.6 3.5 tOOI 1961 11.1 37.0 35.8 13.3 2.8 tOOI 1962 11.1 37.3 37.4 12.1 2.1 toot 1963 11.0 41.4 36.2 9.5 1.9 toot 1964 13.5 42.0 33.8 9.3 1.5 tOOI

Totals, five years 11.5 38.6 35.8 11.8 2.4 tOOI There were 145 men who earned Dean's List averages in February and t91 in June. The corresponding figures for 1962-63 were 130 and 161.

Advanced Placement, Class of 1967 22 received Advanced Placement with credit in 1h course 18 received Advanced Placement with credit in 1 course 13 received Advanced Placement with credit in 11.h courses 8 received Advanced Placement with credit in 2 courses 2 received Advanced Placement with credit in 2Yz courses 1 received Advanced Placement with credit in 3 courses 2 received Advanced Placement with credit in 4 courses

A total of 66 received Advanced Placement with actual course credits. Twelve students had attended Trinity summer sessions, earning from Yz to 4 course credits. Two students had attended other summer sessions. Nineteen students had received exemptions and/or advanced placement ii languages through our own testing program. Thirty-six students had received credit and advanced placement through the College Board Advanced Placement program. Twenty-seven students had received credit for English 101 through the English Department's program (based on College Entrance Examination Board scores and writing samples).

8 Academic Deficiencies 1962-63 Probation Required Withdrawal February Freshmen 31 0 U pperdassmen 19 10 June Freshmen 6 9 U pperdassmen 7 4 Total for Year 63 23 1963-64 February Freshmen 20 1 U pperdassmen 25 14 June Freshmen 7 4 U pperdassmen 7 7

Tota/ for Year 59 26 Scholarships and Loan Statistics 5th Year Engineers f5 Class of 1964 Class of 1965 Class of 1966 Class of 1967 spec. Students Total ships ( 56) $45,580 (69) $59,630 (54) $57,027 (75) $63,888 (4) $3,930 (25 8) $230,055 (49) $19,185 (49) $17,665 (46) $18,650 (37) $11,962 (3) $1,075 (184) $ 68,538 Bursary Employment There were 305 students who earned 63,644, an average of 208.67 per student. This was made up as follows: Students Total Average Dining Hall 59 $12,475 $211 Infirmary 4 1,050 263 Other campus work 258 50,119 194

Total (excluding duplications) 305 $63,644 $208.67 Registration in Courses, 1963-64 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term Air Science 101 35 Air Science 202 35 Air Science 301-302 46 (81) 41 (76) Biology 101-102 53 51 Biology 201-202 61 59 Biology 301-302 36 36 Biology 304 43 Biology 401 25 Biology 403 21 Biology 404 23 Biology 405 3 Biology 406 (199) 6 (218) Chemistry 103-104 95 87 Cheimstry 105-106 22 22 Chemistry 201 32 Chemistry 203 8 33 Chemistry 204 9 Chemistry 209 19 Chemistry 305-306 41 36 Chemistry 307-308 13 11 Chemistry 403 8 Chemistry 404 3 Chemistry 412 (238) 7 (208)

9 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term Classical Civilization 201 21 (21) Economics 201-202 181 172 Economics 203 58 Economics 204 30 Economics 301 50 Economics 302 39 Economics 303 29 Economics 304 38 Economics 306 3 Economics 308 25 Economics 309 37 Economics 311 30 Economics 315 31 Economics 316 20 Economics 323 4 Economics 324 12 Economics 341 36 11 Economics 342 3 Economics 430 9 17 Economics 441-442 5 (443) 2 (399) Education 371 24 Education 374 (Psychology 202) 6 Education 475 23 Education 476 39 Education 491-492 2 11 Education Tutorial (49) 2 (58) Engineering 111 4 7 Engineering 223 16 Engineering 224 15 Engineering 311 19 Engineering 312 18 Engineering 323 12 Engineering 324 14 Engineering 331 9 Engineering 332 6 Engineering 337 9 Engineering 338 7 Engineering 408 4 Engineering 441 6 Engineering 442 8 *Engineering 451 5 *Engineering 452 3 *Engineering 461-462 2 2 *Engineering 471 4 *Engineering 472 4 *Engineering 483-484 5 (91) 5 (93) English 101 226 English 101 (2) 5 English 102 ( 1) 26 English 102 217 English 201 4 5 English 221 15 English 231(2) 11 English 241 85 English 242 76 English 243 35 English 244 13 English 245 53 English 246 71 English 275 7

10 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term English 301 15 English 357(2) 8 English 360 6 English 361 (2) 18 English 362 ( 1) 5 English 364 19 English 371 21 English 373(2) 35 English 375 15 English 378 11 English 381 30 English 382 34 English 401 7 English 402 9 English 491 28 English 492 (572) 28 (566) Fine Arts 101 126 Fine Arts 102 155 Fine Arts 201-202 25 24 Fine Arts 203 24 Fine Arts 204 38 Fine Arts 205-206 9 9 Fine Arts 209 18 Fine Arts 210 25 Fine Arts 301-302 9 10 Fine Arts 303-304 14 15 Fine Arts 305-306 15 17 Fine Arts 401 3 (243) 4 (297) French 101-102 45 38 French 201-202 131 123 French 221 24 French 222 19 French 223 24 French 224 12 French 331 9 French 332 3 French 401 19 French 402 10 French 406 (252) 4 (209) Geology 101 40 Geology 102 3 Geology 209 Geology 302 Geology 305 8 Geology 402 2 Geology 403 2 Geology 404 (51) 1 (37) German 101-102 45 40 German 201-202 55 49 German 221-222 11 9 German 241 11 19 German 301-302 11 11 German 401 8 German 402 1 German 403 2 German 404 (141) 2 (133) Government 101 80 23 Government 201 29 Government 202 ( 1) 22 Government 202 30

11 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term Government 204 42 Government 301 19 Government 303~2) 13 Government 305 2) 14 Government 307 16 Government 308 21 Government 310 12 Government 401 13 Government 402 18 Government 404 6 Government Tutorial 1 (180) 1 (180) Greek 101-102 10 Greek 112 8 Greek 202 ( 1) 6 Greek 302 4 Greek Tutorial 1 (17) 2 (14) History 101-102 258 242 History 201-202 52 52 History 203 98 History 204 100 History 207 34 History 208 41 History 301 26 History 302 18 History 305 14 History 306 13 History 310(1) 23 History 311 29 History 312 26 History 313 27 History 314 32 History 320(1) 15 History 323(2) 29 History 325(2) 19 History 332 20 History 341 24 History 401 22 History 402 15 History 403 22 History 4o4 17 History 405 History 406 1 History Tutorial (645) 2 (627) Italian 101-102 12 12 Italian 201-202 3 3 Italian 361 9 (24) (15) Latin 111-112 15 13 Latin 121-122 9 8 Latin 201-202 12 8 Latin Tutorial 1 (37) 2 (31) Linguistics 101 3 (3) 3 (3) Mathematics 103 128 Mathematics 104 128 Mathematics 105 131 Mathematics 106 123 Mathematics 201 58 Mathematics 202 42 Mathematics 301 28 Mathematics 302 20 Mathematics 303 7

12 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term Mathematics 304 6 Mathematics 305 12 Mathematics 306 7 Mathematics 307 8 Mathematics 308 8 Mathematics 401 10 (382) (334) Music 101 4 Music 102 5 Music 103-104 43 24 Music 105-106 20 23 Music 107-108 6 5 Music 109 11 Music 110 24 Music 112 17 Music 401 8 Music 402 (92) 4 (102) Philosophy 201 73 83 Philosophy 203 36 50 Philosophy 205 39 Philosophy 301 6 Philosophy 302 5 Philosophy 304 32 Philosophy 305 9 Philosophy 306 11 Philosophy 307 10 Philosophy 308 13 Philosophy 309 2 Philosophy 310 15 Philosophy 401 9 Philosophy 402 (184) 13 (222) Physics 101-102 82 79 Physics 121-122 55 43 Physics 201-202 5 5 Physics 221-222 34 31 Physics 301 7 Physics 302 8 Physics 303 8 Physics 306 8 Physics 307 4 Physics 310 2 Physics 401 4 Physics 402 (199) 3 (179) Psychology 101 129 51 Psychology 201 20 Psychology 202 (Education 374) 30 Psychology 203 16 Psychology 204 10 Psychology 206 16 71 Psychology 301 18 Psychology 302 16 Psychology 303 24 Psychology 311 29 Psychology 401 20 Psychology 402 3 Psychology 403 4 9 Psychology 404 (247) 13 {232) Reading Course 20 (20) 22 (22) Religion 101 14 Religion 102 12 Religion 211 144

13 Christmas Trinity Course Term Term Religion 212 159 Religion 221 34 Religion 222 47 Religion 231 43 Religion 251 70 Religion 311 7 Religion 312 11 Religion 314 36 Religion 321 10 Religion 322 20 Religion 352 32 Religion 451 10 Religion 452 8 Religion 491-492 1 (333) 1 (326) Russian 101-102 24 19 Russian 201-202 12 11 Russian 221 6 Russian 222 (42) 4 (34) Spanish 101-102 15 13 Spanish 201-202 38 40 Spanish 221 13 Spanish 222 13 Spanish 223 12 Spanish 224 11 Spanish 321 2 Spanish 322 2 Spanish 401 2 Spanish 402 (82) (80)

14 Departmental

Reports

MEDICAL REPORT First and foremost of major consideration is the gradual increase in the number of automobile accidents-by the students or to the students by vehicles driven by other operators. This year presented several accidents with serious consequences. From the viewpoint of health the record has been good. Although the number of cases of infectious mononucleosis was higher than usual, all the cases were relatively mild. Several students had acquired the disease before September 1963, and came to the Health Service for diagnosis and recommended treatment. They continued with their classes and were advised to limit their physical and social activities. The perennial furor of influenza appearing throughout the country and on the campus was dampened by its failure to materialize. However, in its place German measles, which has not appeared in epidemic form for a good many years, exploded throughout the state of Connecticut and its neighboring states and at the end of June 1964, has practically burned itself out. No unusual or abnormal cases of respiratory infections or surgery occurred. I look forward to 1964-65 to be a more pleasant academic year. FRANCIS L. LUNDBORG, M.D. PLACEMENT As of July 22, the Class of 1964 shows as follows: Graduate School-September 1964 129 52.5% (After service) ( 162) (65.8%) Employed 65 26.4% Military 37 15.0% Undecided, applications pending, traveling, no information available 15 6.1% 246 100.0%

15 Despite the increasing number of Trinity men going on to graduate schools, the number of companies requesting dates at Trinity increased by 13 this past year. The calendar showed 120 companies scheduled; 25 were cancelled due to lack of interest, and two company cancellations were received, resulting in a total of 93 companies who interviewed on campus. They held 898 interviews; 66 offers were made of which 36 were accepted. Again this year the number of companies interviewing juniors and sopho­ mores for summer programs increased. Salary information for the year was as follows : the salary range for B.A. graduates was $3900-$7500, average $5989; the range for B.S. graduates was $5980-$7240, average $6549; the average for .fifth-year engineering majors was $7400. Teaching in public schools ranged from $4900-$5100, average $5000; independent schools ranged from $3000· $4400, average $3750 plus room and board. Summer program offeis ranged from $85-$140 a week. The annual mailing of senior resumes to approximately 675 companies was sent out in January.

JOHN F. BUTLEll

ACADEMIC DEPARTMENTS

A I R s c I E N c E (LT. COLONEL GERALD R. MARSHA.LL) The Department of Air Science continued to examine its capabilities and methods in view of the changing Trinity College student and the de-emphasis of ROTC during the post-Korean War period. Although Air Science cadet enrollment was smaller than the previous year, the number of USAF second lieutenant com­ missionees was greater than any of the five preceding years. Of the seventeen men commissioned (an increase of three over the previous academic year), five won the honor of being selected as Distinguished Military Graduates and were offered Regular USAF commissions. Also, five commissionees deferred entry into active duty to pursue graduate study. This year was highlighted by a cadet-conducted evaluation of the Trinity AFROTC Program. Many of the recommendations contained therein were imple­ mented or are in the process of being implemented. The shift of emphasis from drill and parade requirements to development of greater communicative skills and problem solving attests to the value of some of these recommendations. The formulation of the Trinity College Rifle Team and the outstanding success of the AFR OTC Drill Team were also examples of the fervor and enthusiasm engendered by this evaluation. Another important development was the establishment of the Arnold Air Society Squadron in honor of Major Edward P. Nolin (deceased), former Trinity Assistant Professor of Air Science. This society is dedicated to the advancement of aerospace knowledge through positive example and service. Finally, the Department sponsored the USAF Briefing Team presentation at Trinity, which was well received by the Trinity Community and local industrial, business and education leaders. In September of 1963, Captain John B. Grasser assumed the duties of Air Science 1 and Air Science 2 professor and also as instructor of the Flying Instruction Program. Captain Grasser was formerly an International-Political Military Affain Officer at Headquarters, USAF Liaison Group, Azores.

16 GERALD R. MAR.SHALL-Honors, Grants, etc.: Awarded Air Force Commenda­ tion Medal in 1963 for work accomplished in preceding assignment. Public Lectures, etc.: "The AFROTC Program," Bulkeley High School, Hart­ ford, March 1964; Hartford High School, Hartford, March 1964; Windsor Locks High School, Conn., April 1964; New Milford High School, Conn., May 1964. Meetings: Professor of Air Science Conference, Boston (Mass.) Navy Yard, January 1964; Charter Oak Council, Boy Scouts of America, Hartford, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Trinity College Representative at the 4th Annual Manhattan College Invitational Drill Meet, New York, New York, March 1964; Trinity College Representative to National Intercollegiate Drill Team Cliampionship, Washington, D.C., April 1964. JOHN B. GRASSER-Meetings: Trinity College Representative to Arnold Air Society National Conclave, Denver, Colorado, April 1964; Charter Oak Council, Boy Scouts of America, Hartford, October 1963 and February 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Armed Forces Day Committee, Hartford, January-May 1964. }ACK. A. BIRNKAMMER-Meetings: Trinity Hockey Association, Hartford, November 1963; Executive Meeting, Hartford Amateur Hockey Association, Octo­ ber 1963; Membership Meeting Pee Wee Hockey League (HAHA), Hartford, November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Coach Trinity Hockey Association; Chairman, Player Personnel Committee, Hartford Amateur Hockey Association, September 1963; Tactical Officer, ROTC Summer Encampment, Otis Air Force Base, Massa­ chusetts, July-August 1963; Trinity Representative to Officer Education Program, Course 300 Workshop, Westover Air Force Base, Massachusetts, February 1964; Student at Air University Academic Instructor and Allied Officer Course, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama.

BI 0 L 0 G y D E p A R T M E N T (DR. ]. WENDELL BURGER) Under the guidance of Dr. Asger Langlykke, Chairman of the Biology Visiting Committee, the preliminary work-up for the new life sciences building has been accomplished. This Committee has given a great deal of time, energy, and wisdom to our problems, and the College is lastingly indebted to it. There is a nation-wide new interest in biology, which is evident from our increased enrollment. The revision of course offerings to fit the New Curriculum is being tested and will undoubtedly be changed when we are in a position to give a wider range of work. This year, Mr. Bertram Feingold was our first senior to take the Comprehensive Examination. This year all three members received research grants from the National Insti­ tutes of Health or the National Science Foundation. Several publications have appeared. Undergraduates worked with the staff on several of their projects. The Biology Visiting Committee consists of: Chairman, Dr. Asger F. Lang­ lykke, Director, Research and Development Laboratories, The Squibb Institute for Medical Research, New Brunswick, N. ].; Members: Dr. J. Donald Woodruff, Head of Department of Gynecology, Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, Md.; Dr. John B. Barnwell, '17, Retired Head of Medical Research for the Veterans' Administration, Blairstown, N. ].; Dr. J. Kapp Clark, '36, Vice President and Director of Research, Smith, Kline & French Laboratories, 1500 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; Dr. Paul H. Twaddle, '31, Cardiologist, Hartford, Conn.; Dr. Joseph N. Russo, '41, Obstetrician and Gynecologist, Hartford, Conn.; Dr. Peter B. Clifford, '53, Dentist, Hartford, Conn.; Dr. John McK. Mitchell, '18, Retired Dean of the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania, Rosemont, Pa.; Dr. Edward C. Horn, '38, Pro­ fessor and Chairman, Department of Zoology, Duke University, Durham, N. C.

]. WENDELL BURGER-Publications and Reviews: "The Alkaline (Marshall's) Gland of the Skate" (with T. H. Maren, J. A. Rawls, and A. C. Myers), Compara­ lifle Biochemistry and Physiology, Vol. 10 ( 1963), pp. 1-16; "Bromination of Phthalein Dyes by the Uterus of the Dogfish, Squalus acanthias" (with T. L. Loo and R. H. Adamson), Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, Vol. 114 (1963), pp. 60-63. Honors, Grants, etc.: National Institutes of Health, Grant GM 07459-03.

17 ]AMES M. VAN STONE-Publications and Reviews: "The Relationship of Nerve Number to Regenerative Capacity in the Developing Hind Limb of Rana sylvatica," f ournal of Experimental Zoology, Vol. 155, No. 3 (April 1964), pp. 293-302. Honors, Grants, etc.: Continuation of National Institutes of Health, Grant NB-01705-06. DONALD B. GALBRAITH-Publications and Reviews: "The Agouti Pigment Pattern of the Mouse: A Quantitative and Experimental Study," Journal of Experi­ mental Zoology, Vol. 155, No. 1 (February 1964), pp. 71-90. Honors, Grants, etc.: National Science Foundation Grant to do work in developmental genetics. Public Lectures, etc.: "The Genetic Code," Hall High School,, West Hartford, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Science Fair Judge, Hall High School, West Hartford, March 1964.

c H EM I s T Ry (DR. ROBERT H. SMELLIE, JR.) In the Class of 1964 only three students were graduated as chemistry majors. We are still looking forward to the time when the number of students who meet the requirements to graduate with a major in chemistry is substantially greater than it has been for the past few years. Two modifications in courses required for the chemistry major became effective this year. A new one-year physical chemistry course (307-8) was offered for the first time. This course represents a recasting of three semesters of physical chemis­ try formerly required of chemistry majors. A second weekly laboratory session in Chemistry 305-6 has been added for chemistry majors. Other recast and enhanced courses will be offered to seniors for the first time during the coming year. The Department has been the host for two meetings of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society, one of which was an all-day session held jointly with the New England Association of Chemistry Teachers. We are indebted to Dean Robert M. Vogel for his address of welcome to the delegates on the latter occasion. During the past year the Department has received generous grants from the E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co., the Shell Corporation, and the American Sealants Corp. Research activities of individual members of the staff have been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and Research Corporation. With the aid of a substantial grant to Professor Henry A. DePhillips from the Research Corporation and with the generous assistance of Mr. J. K. Robertson, we have recently been able to acquire a Beckman DK-2A Recording Spectrophoto­ meter. We deeply feel the loss of our beloved friend and colleague, Dr. Vernon K. Krieble, Scovill Professor of Chemistry Emeritus, who passed away on January 23, 1964. We shall always remember him for his warm friendliness, his enthusiasm for learning, and his many years of dedicated service to the College and the Department of Chemistry. The valuable counsel and expert assistance of my colleagues in conducting the affairs of the Department are gratefully acknowledged. STERLING B. SMITH-Meetings: Attended a joint meeting of the Connecticut Valley Section of the American Chemical Society and the New England Association of Chemistry Teachers, Hartford, April 1964. RoBERlf H. SMELLIE, ]R.-Public Lectures: "Recent Developments in the Theory of Flocculation by Polymers," F.M.C. Corporation Research Center, Prince­ ton, N. ]., September 1963; "Chemistry at Trinity College," Meeting of Trinity Alumni Association, Hartford, February 1964; "Flocculation by Polyelectrolytes," Connecticut Valley Section, American Chemical Society Meeting, Trinity College, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Member of the Editorial Board, fo11rnal of Colloid Science; Alternate Councilor, Colloid and Surface Chemistry, American Chemical Society.

18 . EDWARD BoBKo-!fonors, Grants, etc.: Participant, NSF Research Participa- tlon for College Cheffilstry Teachers Program, Case Institute of Technology, June­ August 1963; Recipient of research grant from NSF, September 1963. ]AMES K. HEEREN-Publications and Lectures: "The Reaction of Triphenyl­ phosphine Oxide with Alkyllithium and Grignard Reagents," Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol. 86 (1964), pp. 1100-1105; "The Reaction of Vinyllithium with Tetraphenylphosphonium Bromide and the Formation of Phos­ phinemethylenes by RLi Addition to Vinylphosphonium Halides," Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol. 86 ( 1964), pp. 307-308. HENRY A. DEPHILLIPS, ]R. - Honors, Grants, etc.: Research Corporation Grant for the investigation of the structure of water in aqueous solutions.

CL A S S I C S (PROFESSOR }AMES A. NoT0Pou1os) The Department of Classical Languages wishes to report the following for the academic year 1963-64. The quality of the performance in the undergraduate courses has been very good, and special pride may be taken in noting that two out of the three Woodrow Wilson Fellowships awarded to our college were won by classical majors, Mr. Robert Bennett and Mr. Bruce Frier, who will pursue graduate work in the Classics and Ancient History at Yale and Princeton, respectively. Mr. William Coulson, a member of the Senior Class, was also awarded a graduate fellowship in the Classics at Princeton. The winners of the Goodwin Greek Prizes and the Title and Notopoulos Latin Prizes showed the traditional excellence ex­ pected of these prizes. There was a marked increase in tutorial independent work in the senior years, and this type of training is more likely to be the pattern for the future. Professor Cedric H. Whitman, Chairman of the Department of the Classic5 at Harvard, delivered the 1963 Moore Greek Lecture, entitled "The Comic Hero in Aristophanes." Mr. John Stambaugh, Trinity '60, participated in the archaeological excavation at Nemea, Greece, conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, where he holds the White Fellowship for the current academic year. Up to the past two years the activities of the Department were confined to undergraduate work, but the surprising growth of our Latin M.A. program in the Summer Session has challenged the Department to turn more and more to this frontier of responsibility. The program has attracted nationwide registration and the extent of its growth may be seen in that twenty courses in Latin, Greek and Classical Civilization which are to be offered in the forthcomin~ Summer Term. The Department is grateful to all the many faculty from other institutions that have taught and are teaching in the M.A. Program. A special note of gratitude is owed to Dean Robert N. Vogel and his assistant, Mr. Jacob Edwards, '59, for their guid­ ance and support of this program. }AMES A. NoTOPOULOS-Publications and Reviews: "Studies in Early Greek Oral Poetry" (The C. N. Jackson Lectures delivered at Harvard), Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 68 ( 1964); "The Influence of the Klephtic Ballads on the Heroic Oral Songs of Crete" (Paper read at the International Congress of Cretan Studies), Kretika Chronika, Vol. XV ( 1963), pp. 78-92. Honors, Grants, etc.: President of New England Classical Association, 1963- 64; Elected Director of American Philological Association; Elected to Advisory Board of Greek Heritage. Public Lectttres, etc.: "The Epic and the Tragic in T. E. Lawrence," Trinity College, October 15, 1963; "The Recitation of the Homeric Epics," Hellenic Center of Harvard University, Washington, D.C., February 1964; "Archelochus," Hellenic Center of Harvard University, Washington, D.C., February 1964; "Homer and T. E. Lawrence," Harvard University, April 1964; "Oral Poetry," Wellesley College, May 1964; Visiting Scholar, St. Paul's School, Concord, N.H., April 12-14, 1964; Public Examiner on Boston High School Colloquium on Homer's Odyssey, April 1964; Public Examiner on Homeric Academy of Regis High School, May 1964. Meetings: Classical Association of Connecticut, Cheshire Conn., Oct. 1963; New England Classical Association, Dartmouth College, March 19-21, 1964. Committee and Other Activities: New England Editor of Classical Journal,· Executive Committee of Gennadius Library, Athens, Greece; Managing Committee of American School of Classical Studies, Athens, Greece; Committee on Greek and Latin textbooks of American Philological Association; Associate Member of

19 Classical Civilization Seminar, Columbia University; Advisory Council of Classics Department, Princeton University. ALBERT MERRIMAN - Public Lectures, etc.: Two Lectures on Homer and Greek Tragedy, Loomis Institute, Windsor, Conn., October 1964. Meetings: Classical Association of New England, Connecticut Section, Cheshire, Conn., October 1963. GooDWIN B. BEACH - Publications and Reviews: Review: Poems of Proper· tius by Constance Carrier, Hartford Courant (December 1963); "Petrus Sclopetari~s Aliaeque Febellae lucundae," Nova Edito Petri Sclopetarii, aliis fabeliis iucundu adiectis, Hartford Seminary Foundation Press (June 1964). Pttblic Lectttres, etc.: Fourth International Congress for Living Latin: "De Novis In America Modis Linguas Exteras Docendi,'' Strassbourg, France, September 1963; Description and Report on the Fourth International Congress for Living Latin, Catholic Classical Association, annual meeting, Weymouth, Mass., March 1964; Address to Faculty, Advanced, and Graduate Students of Haverford and neighboring Colleges and Universities on Living Latin, Haverford College, May 1964. Meetings: Annual meeting of The American Classical League (De Usu Ser· monis Latini Promevendo), Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Attended the Annual Meeting of the Com· mittee of Harvard University to Visit the Classical Department, Boston, Mass., March 1964. E c 0 N 0 MI cs (DR. LAWRENCE W. TOWLE) The process of adjusting the Department's program to the New Curriculum is well advanced. For the third successive year the Department gave a comprehensive examination, although the great majority of the 35 senior economics majors were working under the old program and were not required to take the examination. Next year all seniors will be under the New Curriculum and will take the compre­ hensives. This year five seniors enrolled in the Honors Tutorial. All the Depart· ment's advanced courses have been substantially built up to compensate for the reduction from five to four in the number of courses that juniors and seniors carry. During the year the Department sponsored three public lectures. Professor Fritz Machlup of Princeton University delivered the Mead Economics Lecture on the topic, "The Problem with the United States Balance of International Payments." Mr. A. Moyer Kulp of the Wellington Management Corporation chose as his topic for the George A. Ferris Lecture in Corporation Finance "Mutual Fund Manage· ment." Mr. Paul Volcker of the United States Treasury Department lectured on "The Position of the United States Dollar" under the sponsorship of the Depart· ment and the Lecture Committee. The Department made an important move in restoring its mechanical efficiency by acquiring a new Marchant calculator to replace a machine that was nearing the state of exhaustion. LAWRENCE W. TOWLE - Publications and Reviews: Reviews: Stuart Chase, Money to Grow on (Harper and Row); George Soule, The New Science of Eco­ nomics (Viking); Sigmund Diamond, The Nation Transformed: The Creation of an Industrial Society (Braziller); Bernard Nossiter, The Mythmakers: An Euay on Peace and Wealth (Houghton Mifflin); Herbert Feis, Foreign Aid and Foreign Policy (St. Martins) ; Herbert P. Miller, Rich Man, Poor Man (Crowell) ; C. North· cote Parkinson, East and West (Houghton Mifflin); Albert Stiegerwalt, The Na· tional Manufacturers' Association, 1895·1914 (Michigan); Fatemi, Thibault, and Keefe, The Dollar Crisis (Fairleigh Dickinson); Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., My Years with General Motors (Doubleday); Joseph Towle, et al., Ethics and Standards in American Business (Houghton Mifffin); William 0. Douglas, The Anatomy of Liberty (Trident); Richard Austin Smith, Corporations in Crisis (Doubleday); Robert Theobald, Free Men and Free Markets (Potter); Wilkins and Friday, The Economists of the New Frontier (Random House); Ginzberg, Berg, et al., Demo· cratic Values and the Rights of Management (Columbia) - all in the Hartford Courant. Public Lectures, etc.: Radio Programs: "The Balance-of-Payments Problem," Hartford, October 1963; "The European Common Market," Hartford, November 1963; "International Liquidity," Hartford, April 1964. Meetings: Connecticut State Chamber of Commerce, Cheshire, Conn., Novem· ber 1963i American Economic Association, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Con·

20 necticut Valley Economics Association, Springfield, Mass., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Director, Hartford Federal Savings and Loan Association; Executive Council of the Psi Upsilon Fraternity. RICHARD ScHEUCH - Meetings: American Economic Association, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Industrial Relations Research Association, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Connecticut Valley Economic Association, Amherst, Mass., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Regional Selection Committee, National Woodrow Wilson Fellowship; Member, Greater Hartford Council on Economic Education; Corporator, Renbrook School; Director, Symphony Society of Greater Hartford. RANDALL W. TUCKER - Meetings: Connecticut Valley Economic Association, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Conn., October 1963; American Accounting Association, Northeast Regional Graduate School of Business Administration, New York University, N.Y., April 17-18, 1964. Committee and Other Activities: State Chairman of Membership Committee, Connecticut American Accounting Association, 1963-1964; Proctored Fellowship Examination, American Association of Hospital Accountants, June 1964. ROBERT A. BATTIS - Public Lectures, etc.: "Economic Systems," Lecture Series, "Man and His World," Vermont Academy, Saxtons River, Vt., November 1963; "Economics of Disarmament in Connecticut," Wethersfield Kiwanis Club, Wethersfield, Conn., May 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Economic Association Meetings, University of Connecticut, October 1963; Connecticut Valley Economic Association Meeting, American International College, April 1964; American Economic Association Meet­ ing, Boston, Mass., December 1963. LERoY DUNN - Honors, Grants, etc.: G. E. Foundation Award, Applied Economics; Secretary, Pi Gamma Mu. Public Lectures, etc.: Television Appearance, Hartford, October 1963; "Ad­ ministration Tax Policy," Hartford, October 1963; "British Political Party Plat­ forms," Hartford, October 1963; Introduced speakers and chairman of meetings, National Pi Gamma Mu, Trinity College, May 1964. Meetings: American Economics Association, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Tax Institute of America, Washington, D.C., October 1963; Connecticut Valley Economics Association, Springfield, Mass., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Local chairman for arrangements of meeting of National Pi Gamma Mu. WARD S. CURRAN - Publications and Reviews: Reviews: "Critical Study of Accounting for Business Combinations" by Arthur R. Wyatt, Journal of Finance, Vol. XIX, No. 1 (March 1964), pp. 128-29; "The Business Conscience" by Luther Hodges, Hartford Courant,july 21, 1963; "Farms and Farmers in an Urban Age," by Edward Higbee, Hart/or Courant, July 14, 1963; "Money and Capital Markets" by Roland I. Robinson, Choice: Books for College Libraries, Vol. 1, No. 3, May 1964. Honors, Grants, etc.: "Concentration and Competition in Commercial Banking in Hartford, Conn., and Vicinity," unpublished paper completed in April 1964 for the law firm of Sorokin, Sorokin and Hurwitz, 40 pp. ]AMES W. WIGHTMAN - Public Lectures, etc.: "The President's Economic Report," Radio Station WRTC-FM, Hartford, March 1964; "Economics and the Citizen," National Order of Good Templars, West Hartford, April 1964; "Key­ nesian Economics," Trinity College Libertarian SOciety, April 1964; "United States Foreign Policy toward Underdeveloped Nations," Discussant, Hartford Council of College Young Republicans, Hartford, May 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Economic Association, Storrs, Conn., October 1963; American Economic Association, Boston, Mass., December 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Social Problem's Committee, Unitarian Church; Visiting Instructor of Economics during Summer Session at Clark University, 1963. ED u c AT I 0 N (DR-. ALEXANDER A. MACKIMMIE, JR.) The Department of Education has had a year of encouraging progress. Under­ graduate enrollment increased substantially, and graduate enrollment remained at

21 a healthy level. The quality of both groups of students continued to improve. An outstanding feature was the highly successful student teaching program. A total of 24 students (graduate and undergraduate) participated in this supervised experience which involved 10 cooperating school systems. This is the largest number of stu· dent teachers in Trinity's history. Of this contingent, 17 will be in secondary class· rooms in September 1964. The Department again cooperated with the New England School Development Council in sponsoring two significant education conferences: one dealing with the financing of public education and the other with the Middle School. The Commis­ sioners of Education of the six New England states participated in the .finance conference, held on the campus, October 31, 1963. The most important development during 1963-64 was the appointment by President Jacobs of an Advisory Council on Teacher Preparation. The purpose of this council ·is to provide for improved liaison between the Department of Edu· cation and the various departments that are responsible. for the academic training of prospective teachers. The initial meeting of the council, held in June, discussed basic problems and formulated plans for dealing with them during the coming year. ALEXANDER A. MACKIMMIE, JR., - P11blications and Reviews: Review: "American Education Today," Paul Woodring and John Scanlon, Editors, Amherst Alumni News (October 1963); "The Teaching of Teachers," Trinity Coilegt Alumni Magazine, Vol. V, No. 4 (May 1964), pp. 6-8. Public Lectures, etc.: "Your Child and the Curriculum - the Humanities," Martin Kellogg Junior High School P.T.A., Newington, Conn., October 1963; "Episodes in Connecticut Valley Colonial History," Bulkeley High School Lamp­ lighters Club, Hartford, October 1963; "Problems of the College Freshman," College Night for Seniors of the Hartford High Schools, November 1963; "Is a Growing Emphasis on Intellectual Competence Obscuring the Development of Social Conscience?", Panel Member, New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, Boston, Mass., December 1963; "The Liberal Arts College's Role in Teacher Preparation," Connecticut Education Association Institute on Teacher Preparation, Hartford, March 1964; "Opportunities for Christian Service in the Teaching Profession," Panel at the Hartford Seminary, June 1964. Meetings: October Conference for the Exchange of Educational Opinion, Portsmouth, N.H., September 29, 30, October 1, 1963; Annual Meeting of the Connecticut Association of Secondary Schools, Moodus, Conn., October 1963; Member of Alumni Visiting Committee to the American Studies Department, Am· herst College, October 1963; New England School Development Council Conference on Financing Education, Hartford, October 1963; Connecticut Education Associa­ tion Higher Education Conference on the Conant Report, Storrs, Conn., November 1963; Connecticut Association for Student Teaching, Discussion Group Chairman, New Britain, Conn., November 1963; Connecticut Council for Economic Education Annual Meeting, Discussion Group Chairman, Cheshire, Conn., November 1963; Connecticut State Department of Education Evaluation of Bristol Central High School, November 1963; Connecticut Council on School and College Relations Advanced Placement Conference, Windsor, Conn., November 1963; New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools Annual Meeting, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Women's Service Bureau Conference on Teacher Education, Hart· ford, February 1964; New England School Development Council Board of Education Conference, Boston, Mass., April 1964; New England Council for the Advancement of School Admin.istration Conference, Storrs, Conn., April 1964; Connecticut Coun­ cil on Teacher Education Annual Meeting, Middletown, Conn., April 1964; New England School Development Council Conference on the Middle School, Berlin, Conn., April 1964; National Conference of Christians and Jews Meeting on Racial Tensions, Newington, Conn., May 1964; Greater Hartford Conference on Human Relations, June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Associate Executive Secretary, New England School Development Council; Consultant, Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Con· ference; Trustee, Henry Barnard Memorial Fund; Director, Junior Achievemen~ Chairman, Scholarship Committee; Director, Trinity College Parents Association; Director, Civic Music Association of Greater Hartford; Member, Rotary Club of Wethersfield; Chairman, Educational Institutions Committee of the Hartford Chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews; Scholarship Committee, Am· herst ·Alumni Association of Connecticut; Editorial Board of the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools Review.

22 RICHARD K. Moruus-Publications and Reviews: Editorial, Teacher Education Quarterly, Vol. XXI: 1-2, Fall 1963; Book Reviews: Mulik Raj Anand, Is There A Contemporary Indian Civilization?; Norman Folmar, Death of the Thresher, both for Choice: Books for College Libraries, 1963-1964. Honors, Grants, etc.: Appointed Associate Member, Fourth East-West Phil­ osophers' Conference, University of Hawaii, March 9, 1964, for the Summer of 1964. Public Lectures, etc.: Humanities Lecture Series, Conard f!igh School, West Hartford, October 1963 and February 1964; "Race, As the Anthropologist Sees It," Connecticut Mutual Club Lecture Series, February 1964; "What the Conant Report Means to Connecticut," panel member, Connecticut Education Association Leader­ ship Conference, Hartford, January 1964; "Excellence in School," National Honor Society Meeting, Bloomfield (Conn.) High School, March 1964. Meetings: Regional Meetings, National Philosophy of Education Society, Fitchburg, Mass., October 1963 and April 1964; New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, Evaluation, Danbury State College, November 1963; Connecticut Council on Teacher Education, Central Connecticut State College, November 1963, and Wesleyan University, April 1964; Board Meeting, Teacher Education Quarterly, University of Hartford, October 1963, Danbury State College, February 1964, and Trinity College, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Executive Committee, Hartford Anthropologi­ cal Society; Chairman, Editorial Advisory Board, Connecticut Teacher, journal of the Connecticut Education Association; Editorial Board, Teacher Education Quarter­ ly; Connecticut Council on Teacher Education Evaluation Team, New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.

ENGINEERING (PROFESSOR EDWIN P. NYE) Personnel: Associate Professor Theodore R. Blakeslee returned to full-time, active teaching status in September. Robb N. Russell, '60, also joined our staff at that time as an Instructor. Mr. Russell, having received his M.S. from the Univer­ sity of Illinois in June of 1963, spent the summer before reporting to Trinity working for Hamilton Standard Division of United Aircraft and had the satisfaction of seeing the results of his work issued as a formal, company report. William R. Smith III left at the end of the year to take an instructorship at the University of Connecticut, where he is actively pursuing work which should lead to a doctor­ ate in engineering. Maior TJV or ks: Probably the most important action taken by the Department this year was the initiation of regular usage of the UAC high-speed, digitar com­ puter capability on a time-rental basis so as to provide overnight processing at UAC of campus-prepared programs. Interest in and use of the system has spread beyond the confines of the Engineering Department, and we foresee increasing use of the system in the future. The UAC "Summer Laboratory in Engineering," instituted last year under the most able direction of Associate Professor August E. Sapega, will be offered again this year. This is part of the College's "Transition" program for qualified secondary school juniors, with special interest in a study of factors which influence vocational decisions in relationship to the selection of engineering. The general quality of the Engineering program at the College was reviewed by two agencies during the year. One was a most able Visiting Committee under the chairmanship of Leonard Hobbs, retired Vice President of UAC. The other was an ECPD Accreditation Committee under the chairmanship of Dean Weber of Georgia Institute of Technology. The reports of both committees are expected early in the next academic year. In the meantime, a highly pragmatic but most meaningful evaluation is being rendered by the admissions offices of the leading graduate schools. Based on fellowships won and admissions granted, our program would appear to be providing more than adequate preparation. EDWIN P. NYE - Public Lectures, etc.: "The Transient Nature of the Tangible," Cherry Lawn School, Darien, Conn., April 1964; "Responsibility of a School Board Member," Granby (Conn.) Education Association, April 1964; Graduation Address, Granby High School, June 1964; "Why I Worship With the Church," Trinity Chapel series, March 1964; Other high school talks on engineering as a career.

23 Meetings: New England Meeting of American Society for Engineering Educa· tion, Boston, Mass., October 1963; ASME Regional Conference, Providence, RJ" May 1964; Annual Meeting of American Society for Engineering Education, Orono, Me., June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: NSF 8-week Summer Seminar on Physical Horizons of Engineering, Boulder, Colo., July and August 1963; Chairman, Epis­ copal Diocesan Commission for College Work; Vice-Chairman, Hartford Section of ASME; Incorporator of an Institutional representative to University Research Institute of Connecticut; Member of Board of Education, Bloom.field, Conn. WENDELL E. KRAFT - Meetings: Annual Meeting of Society of Naval Archi· tects and Marine Engineers, New York, N.Y. November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Member of the Vestry, St. James's Churdi1 West Hartford; Member of West Hartford Committee of the Greater Hartford YMCA. THEODORE R. BLAKESLEE II - Publications and Reviews: "PTC 10, Qn. trifugal and Axial-Flow Compressors and Exhausters,'' American Society of Me­ chanical Engineers, ASME Power Test Code No. 10. Public Lectures, etc.: "Digital Computer Uses by Engineers (I)," Manchester (Conn.) High School, April 1964; "Digital Computer Uses by Engineers (II)," Manchester High School, May 1964. Meetings: ASME Annual Meeting (including a meeting of the PTC 10 (.om. mittee), Philadelphia, Pa., November 1964; ASEE Annual Meeting, University of Maine, June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Advanced Science Seminar on Kinematics, Yale University, July 1963; Secretary, ASME Power Test Codes Committee No. 10, Centrifugal and Axial-Flow Compressors. AUGUST E. SAPEGA - Public Lectures, etc.: Member of Panel, "Emerging Patterns in Engineering Education - the High School-College Interface," New England Section Meeting of the American Society for Engineering Education, Boston, Mass., October 1963. Meetings: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York, N.Y., March 1964; International Symposium on High-Strength Materials, Berkeley, Calif" June 1964. ROBB N. RUSSELL - Publications and Reviews: "An Analysis of Individual Rendezvous in Circular Orbit," Hamilton Standard Division, United Aircraft Corporation. Meetings: Northeast Electronic Research and Engineering Meeting, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers International Convention and Show, New York, N .Y., March 1964; American Society for Engi· neering Education Annual Meeting, University of Maine, June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Member, Young Engineering Teachers' Com· mittee, New England Section of the American Society for Engineering Education.

ENGLISH (DR. FREDERICK L. GWYNN) Personnel. John A. Dando was on sabbatical leave for the Christmas Term, Stephen Minot on leave of absence for the Trinity Term, and Kenneth W. Cameron on leave of abse°:ce for the a~a~emic year. Substitutin~ for them were George Doskow (Connecticut) and Wdltam A. Glasser (Iowa). In the 1963 Summer Session, visiting teachers were Glauco Cambon (Rutgers), John C. Gerber (Iowa), Robert U. Jameson (Haverford School), Robert E. Knoll (Nebraska), and Carl A. Niemeyer .(Union). Curriculum. 38 entering freshmen were exempted from English 101 and 10 from English 102, a decrease from last year's 58 and lS because of higher standards employed. 42 freshmen failed the English 101 Proficiency Test in January, an increase over the 37 of the previous year, but 32 of them passed the Test later in the year. Course enrollments averaged 630 per term. . The Department offered for the first time graduate courses in Symbolism, Satire, and the Study of English (for secondary school teachers), and, in the Summer Session, Modern American Poetry, Elizabethan Drama, and Chinese Literatwe. Major Work. 28 seniors completed the thesis-colloquium course, and 4 re­ ceived honors in English at Commencement. There were 39 junior majors, who

24 began an outside reading program under the New Curriculum, taking examinations on three substantial and general books each term. In graduate courses, the average enrollment was 58; 18 students completed theses and received the M.A. degree, the largest total in recent years. The Department received the following professional visitors: The New England College English Association and the Connecticut Council of Teachers of English, with Northrop Frye (Toronto), W. Nelson Francis (Brown), and Richard M. Ohmann (Wesleyan) as speakers; Karl Shapiro as poet-in-residence for one week; Neville Rogers (Brandeis) lecturing on Shelley; X. ]. Kennedy and May Swenson reading their poetry; and Odell Shepard (former Department Chairman) reading and lecturing. The Department heard monthly papers by colleagues: making a textbook (Gwynn), writing .fiction (Minot), Oriental literature (Benton), making a .film on Dante (Dando and Campo), Frost's "The Draft Horse'' (Gwynn), extracurricular reading (Risdon), stylistics (Smith), linguistics and literature (McNulty), and composition and literature (Gwynn). FREDERICK L. GWYNN - Publications and Reviews: Faulkner A L'Univer­ site, translation of Faulkner in the University, Gallimard, Paris, 1964; Sections of The Fiction off. D. Salinger (written with J. L. Blotner), reprinted in Studies in /. D. Salinger, ed. Laser and Fruman; Review of Warren French, "J. D. Salinger," American Literature, Spring 1964; "A Catechism of the Liberal Arts," Trinity Tripod, April 1964. Public Lectures, etc.: "Composition and Literature," convention of College Conference on Composition and Communication, New York, N.Y., March 1964; Panel discussion, "The Study of English," WTIC-TV, Hartford, January 1964; Introduction to addresses on "Sequence and Change in the College English Curricu­ lum," New England College English Association and Connecticut Council of Teachers of English meeting, Tr.lnity College, April 1964. Meetings: Section Chairman, New England College English Association, Northeastern University, November 1963; Connecticut Council on School and College Relations, Windsor (Conn.) High School, November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Member, Committee on the Education of College Teachers of English, National Council of Teachers of English; Member, Executive Committee, National Association of Chairmen of Departments of English in Colleges and Universities; Member, Executive Committee, Connecticut Council of Teachers of English; Member, Executive Committee, New England College English Association; Program Chairman, Whiting Lane School Parent-Teachers Association, West Hartford, 1963-1964. ]. BARD MCNULTY - Publications and Reviews: Older Than The Nation: 200 Years of the Hartford Courant, Pequot Press, Stonington, Conn., 260 pp. Public Lectures, etc.: "History of Hartford Journalism," Hartford, February 1964; "History of Hartford Journalism," Mansfield Historical Society, Mansfield, Conn., March 1964; "Fourth of July Celebration," Hartford, July 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Trustee, Antiquarian and Landmarks Society of Connecticut; President, Historical Society of Glastonbury; Chairman, Glastonbury Heritage Commission. RALPH M. WILLIA.MS-Publications and Reviews: A total of 27 reviews, Hartford Courant, September 1963 to June 1964; 2 reviews, College English, Vol. 25 (November 1963 and March 1964); 1 review, Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 37 (Winter 1963-1964), p. 92. Meetings: Connecticut Council of Teachers of English, Joint Meeting with New England College English Association, Trinity College, Afril 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Executive Committee o Connecticut Council of Churches and two of the Council's minor committees; Advisory Council, Con­ necticut Association for Perceptually Handicapped Children; Schools Committee of New England Yearly Meeting of Friends (Quakers) in charge of Moses Brown School, Providence, R. I.; Board of Trustees, Lincoln School for Girls, Providence, R. I. KENNETH W. CAMERON-Publications and Reviews: Books: The Catholic Revival in Episcopal Connecticut (1850-1925), Bridgeport (Trinity Church), 1963 (Pp. 350); Centennial History of Trinity Episcopal Church, Bridgeport, Contt., Bridgeport (Trinity Church), 1963 (Pp. 213); Thoreau's Literary Notebook in the

25 Library of Congress, Hartford (Transcendental Books), 1964 (Pp. 375); Articles: "Emerson's Indian Superstition with a Dissertation on Orientalism at Harvard," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 32 (III Quarter 1963), pp. 1-42; "Photographs of Concord and the Emerson Family," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 32, pp. 43-85; "Samoan Laws for Melville's Ships in 1839," Emerson Society Q'uarterly, No. 33, pp. 47-48; "'Indian Superstition' and Orientalism in Emerson's Harvard," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 33 (IV Quarter 1963), pp. 7-16; "Thoreau Manu­ scripts-Ungathered and Migrant," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 35 (II Quarter 1964), pp. 84-86; "New Japanese Translations of Carlyle's Works," Emerso• Society Quarterly, No. 35, pp. 86-89; "The Episcopal Church in the Romanticism of Sylvester Judd," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 35, pp. 100-101; "Popular Writers and Critics in the Mid-Nineties," Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 36 (Ill Quarter 1964), pp. 1-51. Public Lectures, etc.: Centennial Address at Trinity Church, Bridgeport, Conn., May 1964; "Bishop Seabury and the O~ford Revival" (Delivered at Service of Thanksgiving for the Bestowal of the American Episcopate), Bridgeport, Conn., November 1963; Report to the Diocesan Convention, Hartford, May 1964. Meetings: Thoreau Society, Concord, Mass., July 1963; Convention of the Diocese of Connecticut, Hartford, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Contributing editor of Abstracts of English Studies; Editor of The Emerson Society Quarterly; Editor of The Historiographer of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut; Archivist and Historiographer of the Diocese of Connecticut since 1951. JoHN DANDO-Publications and Reviews: "On Books and Reading," thirty· nine talks on contemporary American Literature, "Voice of America," radio, Worldwide Service. Public Lectures, etc.: "The Doctor and Liberal Education," American College of Physicians and Surgeons, Hartford, October 1963; "Five Great Themes from Shakespeare," five lectures for YWCA Adult Education Program, Hartford, October 1963; "The Community Library," Cheshire (Conn.) Public Library, April 1964; "The Mind of Shakespeare," Trinity College Associates Annual Meeting, May 1964. Meetings: "Books in the Schools," Convention Address to the Teachers of Wey­ mouth, Mass., May 1964; Commencement Address to the Woodrow Wilson Senior High School, Middletown, Conn., June 1964. DANIEL B. RISDON-Public Lectures, etc.: Panelist, "Changing Curriculum in the Small Liberal Arts College," Goddard College Anniversary Conferenet, Plainfield, Vt., October 1963. Meetings: New England Association of .Teachers of English, Fall Conference, Manchester, Vt., September 1963; New England College English Association and Connecticut Council of Teachers of English, Trinity College, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Representative for Trinity College at the Anniversary Conference on "Change and Challenge in Liberal Education," Goddard College, Plainfield, Vt.; Chairman, Committee for judging essays submitted for the Connecticut Governor's Committee on Employment of the Handicapped; Judge, National Council of Teachers of English, 1963 Annual Achievement Awards Com­ petition. RICHARD P. BENTON-Publications and Reviews: "Is Poe's 'The Assignation' a Hoax?" Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Vol. XVIII, No. 2 (September 1963), pp. 193-197; "The Chinese Eight-Legged Essay," Exercise Exchange, Vol. XI, No. 2 (May 1964), pp. 3-5. ]AMES L. POTTER-Meetings: College Conference on Composition and Com­ munication, New York, N. Y., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Judge, Connecticut State Scholastic Essay Contest, February 1964. ROBERT D. FOULKE-Publications and Reviews: "Life in the Dying World of Sail, 1870-1910," Journal of British Studies, Vol. III, No. 1 (November 1963), pp. 105-136; Review: R. L. Megroz, Joseph Conrad's Mind and Method (reissue), Choice: Books for College Libraries, April 1964; Review: Carol Ohmann, Ford Madox Ford, Choice: Books for College Libraries, May 1964.

26 Public Lectures, etc.: "Jewish-American Culture in Contemporary Fiction," uth Glastonbury (Conn.) Library Board, November 1963; Interview with Karl Shapiro (Channel 24 ETV), Hartford, February 1964; "Bernard Malamud," Manchester (Conn.) Community College, April 1964; "The Curriculum in Litera­ ture," New England College English Association Meeting at Trinity College, April 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Conference of Colleges and Secondary Schools, Windsor, Conn., November 1963; Conference on College Composition and Communication, New York, N. Y., March 1964; New England College English Association, Trinity College, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Modern Language Association; National Council of Teachers of English; College English Association; Connecticut Council of Teachers of English; American Association of University Professors. PAUL SMITH-Publications and Reviews: "Restless Casuistry: Shelley's Com­ position of The Cenci," Keats-Shelley Journal, Vol. XIII (Winter 1964), pp. 77-85; "The Infernal Reminiscence: Mythic Patterns in Mark Twain's 'The Cele­ brated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,'" Satire Newsletter, Vol. I (Spring 1964), pp. 41-44. Public Letcures, etc.: "Criticism and the Curriculum: Part I," New England College English Association, Trinity College, April 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Council on School and College Relations, Windsor, Conn., November 1963; Conference on College Composition and Communication, New York, N.Y., March 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Faculty Member of the Telluride Association Summer Program at Cornell University, Summer 1963. STEPHEN MINOT-Publications and Reviews: "Windy 4th," a short story, Virginia Quarterly Review, Winter Issue, 1964. Honors, Grants, etc.: Leave of absence, Trinity Term, 1964; Fellowship awarded by the Saxton Memorial Trust for the purpose of writing a novel, Novem­ ber 1963. Public Lectures, etc.: "Descriptive vs. Literary Writing," Hartford Writers' League, October 1963; "Writing Courses Today," Wethersfield (Conn.) High School faculty, November 1964. GEORGE DosKow-Meetings: College English Association, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Modern Language Association, Chicago, Ill., December 1963; College English Association, Hartford, May 1964.

FI N E A R T s (PROFESSOR JOHN c. E. TAYLOR) Early this year, January 7 through January 20, to be specific, the Department put on an exhibition in the Library Conference Room of paintings and prints that recently have been given to the College. Included were etchings and wood engrav­ ings, presented by Mr. Newton C. Brainard, two watercolors by John Grillo, given by the Olsen Foundation, and a seascape by Bennett Bradbury, given by Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Hockett in memory of their son David, Trinity '57. Toward the end of the academic year the annual exhibition of student work took place in Wean Lounge in Mather Hall. We invited Mr. Gail Martin of the Hartford Art School Faculty (University of Hartford) to act as a "one-man" jury of awards. He gave the First Prize to Theodore Pettus, '64, and Honorable Men­ tions to Henry Stocek, '65; Michael Somma, '65; Karl Smith, '64; and Allan Atherton, '64. As in past years, so now, some of our students sent their work to the Inter­ collegiate Exhibition at the Springfield (Mass.) Museum. It is a pleasure to report that the First Oil Award went to Allan Atherton, '64. The embellishment of fences around construction projects, fast becoming a Trinity tradition, was ably carried on this year in two instances--one, on the fence around the growing Arts Center, and the other on the fence around the new addi­ tion to the Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co. The first was organized by Professor Pappas as a class project. The second was undertaken at the invitation of Mr. Lyman B. Brainerd, '30, President of the Hartford Steam Boiler Company and Vice Chairman of Trinity's Board of Trustees. Prizes for the

27 latter project were awarded as follows: 1st, John R. Donahue, '64; 2nd, Allan Atherton, '64; 3rd, Thomas E. Galvin, '65; 4th, Peter H. Bogert, '64; and 5th, Ronald C. Steele, '65. It is again gratifying to report that a number of our seniors have been admitted to architectural schools. Finally, the Austin Arts Center is talcing shape, and if all goes well, we hope to be in the building some time next semester. The individual activities of the Fine Arts Faculty are noted below. JOHN C. E. TAYLOR-Public Lectures, etc.: Conard High School's Humanities Program, West Hartford, December 1963; Loomis School's Humanities Program, Windsor, Conn., January 14, 16, and 21, 1964, April 7, 9, and 14, 1964; Took part in WRTC program "Word from the Watkinson, Prospects for the Arts Center," March 1964; Talk to Trinity Club of Hartford, "The Fine Arts at Trinity Today," April 1964; Took part with Chaplain Thomas in "From the College Campus," WTIC-TV, Hartford, May 1964. Meetings: Episcopal Men's Convention, New Haven, Conn., October 1963; Member of Jury of Awards, Waterbury Art Festival, Conn., August 1963; Judge, Poquonock Parent·Teachers' Club Achievement Fair, Windsor, Conn., February 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Council of Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts; Hartford's Fine Arts Commission; Sent two Chapel pew-end drawings to an exhibition of liturgical arts at Trinity Church, Southport, Conn., "Contemporary Religious Art and Architecture in Connecticut". MITCHEL N. PAPPAS-Publications and Reviews: "Directions in Modern Art," Trinity College Alumni Magazine, March 1964. Art and Painting Exhibits: Connecticut Watercolor Society Annual Show, Hartford, September 1963; O.R.T. Exhibit, Hartford, December 1963; One-Man Show, Portraits, Trinity College, May 1964. Public Lectures, etc.: Dental Society Lecture and Watercolor Demonstration, Hartford, September 1963; "Oil Painting Technique," Manchester (Conn.) Fine Arts Association, September 1963; "Role of Artist in the Community," Wethersfield (Conn.) Rotary Club, October 1963; "Recent Trends in Contemporary Painting," Trinity College Senate, November 1963; "Art and the Contemporary Artist," Conard High Humanities Lecture, West Hartford, January 1964; "Contern· porary Art in Your Community," Corvair Club, West Hartford, January 1964; "Art Masterpieces in Greece and Italy," Junior Century Club, Manchester, Conn., April 1964; "Art in Everyday Life," East Hartford Art League, May 1964; "Art Climate in Greater Hartford," Wethersfield Kiwanis Club, May 1964; "Preparation of a Portrait," Trinity Alumni Talk, June 1964; Talk about Connecticut Watercolor Society Annual Exhibit, Harvey Olson Show, Channel 30. Meetings: Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts, Hartford, April 1964; Con· necticut Watercolor Society, Hartford, May 1964. Committee and Othe1· Activities: Connecticut Scholastic Advisory Board Meeting; Jury Chairman, Connecticut Scholastic Art Contest; Jury, East Hartford Art League Exhibit; National Scholastic Chairmen's Meeting. CHARLES B. FERGUSON-Public Lectures, etc.: "Graphics Demonstration and Lecture," November 1963; "Water Color Demonstration and Lecture," January 1964; "Sculpture Thru the Ages," January 1964; "Nineteenth and Twentieth Cen­ tury American Architecture," February 1964; "Early Twentieth Century American Painting," February 1964; "Contemporary American Painting," March 1964-all at Renbrook School, West Hartford. Art and Painting Exhibits: One-Man Show, Town and Country Club, Hart· ford, February 1964; One-Man Show, Wethersfield Shopping Center, April 1964; One-Man Show, Red Barn Studio, Fishers Island, N.Y., July 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Director of Red Barn Studio; Conducted Landscape Painting Classes; Paintings exhibited at: The Crossroads of Sport, New York, N.Y.; The Christmas Shop, Wilmington, Del.; Henderson Gallery, Calif. G E 0 L 0 G y (DR. RANDOLPH w. CHAPMAN) On February 1, 1964, Dr. Thomas C. Mentzer was promoted to the rank of Assistant Professor. The Department and the College are extremely fortunate to have a man of Dr. Mentzer's character and ability on the faculty.

28 No major changes were made in the curriculum during the academic yeo.r. However, it should be pointed out that the course in Economic Geology (Geology 305), which was introduced into the curriculum last year, has proved quite popular. An innovation in the Geology 101, 102 laboratory this year was the assignment of a special field project in Rock Ridge Park, designed to give students some practical experience in applying geological principles and methods. The Department continued to acquire recently-published reference books as well as back numbers of important geological journals. Special equipment pur­ chased includes several dust-proof storage cabinets for holding collections, a set of plastic models illustrating geologic features and phenomena, 8 special compasses for field mapping, and a variety of geologic maps of the United States and foreign countries. The demand for earth scientists throughout the nation is now showing a sharp rise. Thus, once again, the geology profession can off er a fascinating and rewarding career to the able, enthusiastic student. RANDOLPH W. CHAPMAN-P1Jblic Lectures: Series of nine lectures in Mineralogy and Petrology, St. Joseph College, West Hartford, September 1963 to January 1964; "The Structure and Origin of Natural Crystals," Chemistry Club, St. Joseph College, April 1964. Meetings: Geological Society of America, New York, N.Y., November 1963; Connecticut Geologists, Middletown, Conn., August 1963; Six meetings, Geology Club, Yale University, October 1963 to April 1964; Six meetings, Geology Club, Wesleyan University, January to March 1964; Geology Club, University of Conn., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Geological research for the Connecticut Geological and Natural History Survey, July 1963 to June 1964. THOMAS C. MENTZER-Publications and Reviews: Reviews: Fossils in North America, by J. E. Ranson, Harper and Row, New York (1964), March 1964; Paleogeography of the Eastern Gulf Coast, by F. B. Cheetham, Geology Society of America, Memoir 91, New York ( 1964), June 1964; both for Choice: Books for College libraries, Olin Library, Wesleyan University. Honors, Grants, etc.: Appointed Assistant Professor of NSF Sequential Insti­ tute for Earth and Space Studies, Cornell University, Summer Session 1964. Meetings: Geological Society of America, New York, N.Y., November 1963; National Association of Geology Teachers, Washington, D.C., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Treasurer, Fireside Club, Immanuel Congre­ gational Church, Hartford.

G 0 V E R N M E N T (DR. REX C. NEAVERSON, Acting Chairman) During the year Dr. Murray S. Stedman, Jr., was appointed Professor of Government and Chairman of the Department. He will take up his duties from the first of September. Dr. Stedman, who has previously taught at Brown, Swarth­ more, Haverford and Columbia, has recently been with the United Council of Churches. He is a distinguished author in the field of political science. His latest book published in the spring of 1964 is Religion and Politics in America. By coinci­ dence Dr. Ferwerda, whom he replaces, has accepted an appointment with the same organization. It is hoped and expected that the Department will continue to grow and flourish with the new Chairman as it did with the old. Albert Gastmann, Instructor in Government since 1962, completed work upon his dissertation this spring and will be awarded his Ph.D. in August. Recently there has been a gratifying increase in the number of students enrolled in courses in the Department and especially in those expressing an interest in a government major. In the spring of 1964 the faculty approved the addition of five courses to the department curriculum in preparation for Dr. Stedman and in anticipation of a continuation of the growth of student interest in the study of government. REx C. NEAVERSON-Public Lectures, etc.: "Conflict in the Communist Bloc, the End of a Bi-polarized World," Foreign Policy Association, Hartford, October and November 1963; "The Feudal Theory of Sovereignty," St. Joseph College, West Hartford, January 1964; "The Study of Government at Trinity," Trinity Club

29 of Hartford, March 1964; "The Sino-Soviet Dispute," Glastonbury (Conn.) High School, April 1964; "The Sino-Soviet Dispute," Chaffee School, Windsor, Conn., May 1964; "The Civil Rights Bill," Bethesda Church, New Haven, Conn., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Connecticut Advisory Committee to Federal Civil Rights Commission. ALBERT GASTMANN-Honors, Grants, etc.: Doctoral Thesis: The Place of Surinam and the Netherlands Antilles in the Political and Constitutional Structrm of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Columbia University, May 19, 1964. Public Lectures, etc.: Read a paper on "Regionalism and the Nation State" at the 7th Annual Conference on World Affairs of McGill University, October 1963; "Common Market" and "The Policy of Containment and the Problems of NATO," Glastonbury (Conn.) High School, November 1963; "Cambodian Politics," Loomis School, Windsor, Conn., January 1964; Discussion on "U.S. Involvement in Latin America: What Is It? What Should It Be?" WSCH-FM, Hartford, February 1964; "DeGaulle and France," Wethersfield (Conn.) High School, April 1964. Meetings: Annual meeting of APSA, New York, N.Y., September 1963; McGill Conference on World Affairs, Montreal, Canada, October and November 1963; IRIC Conference on Africa, Mount Holyoke College, February 1964; Model United Nations General Assembly, University of Hartford, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Member of Committee on "Model United Nations General Assembly" of the F.P.A. of Greater Hartford; Parliamentarian to the Model Assembly of the Twenty-one Student Branches of the F.P.A. LEON I. SALOMON-Honors, Grants, etc.: Elected to Pi Gamma Mu. Public Lectures, etc.: "The Structure of American Political Parties," Canton, Conn., October 1963. Meetings: American Political Science Association, New York, N.Y., Septem· ber 1963; Mississippi Valley Historical Association, Cleveland, Ohio, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Member, Executive Board, American Civil Liberties Union; Member, Board of Advisers, Hartford Tutorial Project.

H I S T 0 R Y (Dai. D. G. BRITON THOMPSON) Autumn activities were highlighted by the Mead History Lecture, "How We Won the Peace--New Light on the Diplomacy of the American Revolution," pre­ sented by Professor Richard B. Morris of Columbia University. In the early spring Professor Emeritus Ralph H. Gabriel of Yale gave the Phi Beta Kappa Lecture entitled "Science and Religion in Mid-Twentieth Century America." He remained on the campus for two days and spoke to several of the History classes. Since the full weight of the New Curriculum would fall on the Oass of '65, a meeting of the majors was held early in the Trinity Term to explain procedures and answer questions. At another meeting of the majors on April 15 a series of lectures by members of the Department, in commemoration of the 50th Anni· versary of World War I, was inaugurated. Mr. Thomas E. Willey spoke bril· liantly on the topic, "The Luddendorff Enigma." The Department will sustain a real loss with the departure of Professor Philip L. Kintner, who goes to Grinnell College. This year Dr. Edward W. Sloan joined the Department and has more than pleased everyone. Dr. Philip C. F. Bankwitz, during the Trinity Term, was on sabbatical leave. His place was taken by the Reverend Borden W. Painter, Trinity '58, who will teach part-time next year. All enjoyed having Borden Painter back on the campus. The many professional and other extracurricular activities of the History faculty are detailed below. As usual, members of the Department have been prominent on numerous college committees. This will be my last report as Chairman. Few chairmen are so fortunate as not only to have such an eminently qualified successor as Dr. George B. Cooper but also to be able to hand on a Department with such an able faculty of scholars and teachers, who have attracted a large number of enthusiastic students. This year the senior majors include an unusual number who were graduated with honors and two who received Woodrow Wilson Scholarships. The Department has never been stronger.

30 D. G. BRINTON THOMPSON-Publications and Reviews: "John Thompson ... of Philadelphia, Quaker School Master and Merchant," The Pennsylvania Genea­ logical Magazine, Vol. XXIII, No. 3 ( 1964). Public Lectures, etc.: "Panama Canal Dispute," WRTC, Hartford, February 1964; "Election Year Politics," Trinity Club Luncheon, Hartford, June 1964. Meetings: Community Leaders Program, Foreign Policy Association, New York, N.Y., December 1963; American Historical Association, Philadelphia, Pa., December 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Trustee of Stowe, Beecher, Hooker, Seymour, Day Foundation; Publication Committee, Connecticut Historical Society; Board of Governors, Descendants of the Founders of Hartford; Vestry and Finance Com­ mittee, St. Saviour's Church, Bar Harbor, Me. GEORGE B. CooPER-Public Lectures, etc.: Several talks delivered in local schools in capacity as member of Board of Education, Hartford; "Value of History," Suffield Foundation, Suffield, Conn., March 1964. Meetings: Conference on British Studies, New York University, October 1963 and April 1964; American Historical Association, Philadelphia, Pa., December 1963; Publications Committee, C.B.S., Philadelphia, Pa., December 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Member, Selection Committee, Henry Fellow­ ships; Member, National Advisory Cancer Council; Member, Committee on Carcino­ genesis and Prevention, United States Public Health Service; Member, Committee on Relations between NCI and National Medical Laboratory, meeting at Oak Ridge, Tenn., June 1964; Member, Hartford Board of Education; Managing Editor, Journal of British Studies. EUGENE W. DAVIS-Public Lectures, etc.: "The Place of History among the Social Sciences," Hartford, May 1964; "American Dialects," Hartford, February 1964. Meetings: American Philological Association, Pittsburgh, Pa., December 1963; Archaeological Institute of America, Pittsburgh, Pa., December 1963. RoBERfr C. BLACK III-Committee and Other Activities: Treasurer, First District Republican Committee of West Hartford; Member, Conservation Com­ mission of West Hartford. NORTON DowNs-Publications and Reviews: Editor, The Medieval Pageant: Readings in Medieval History, The University Series in History, D. VanNostrand Co., Inc., Princeton, N.J. ( 1964); Naissance de L'Ettrope, R. Lopez, Speculum, Vol. XXXVIII, No. 4 (October 1963), pp. 644-646; "Modern Islam, The Search for Cultural Identity," G. E. von Grunebaum, The Muslim World, Vol. LIII, No. 4 (1963), pp. 336-337; "Crusade, Commerce and Culture," "The Crusade, Historio­ graphy and Bibliography," Aziz S. Atiya, The Muslim World, Vol. LIII, No. 3 (1963), pp. 255-256; "The Story of the Crusades," Alfred Duggan, Choice: Books for College Libraries (April 1964). Meetings: American Historical Association, Philadelphia, Pa., December 1963; Conference on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, March 1964; Annual Meeting, Medieval Academy of America, Princeton University, April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Parent Council, Kingswood School; Vestry, Trinity Episcopal Church of Hartford.

PHILIP C. F. BANKWITZ-Publications and Reviews: Sixty Days That Shook the West, Jacques Benoist-Mechin, International Journal (1964), pp. 266-268. Honors, Grants, etc.: Sabbatical leave, Trinity Term 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Director, Foreign Policy Association of Greater Hartford. GLENN WEAVER-Publications and Reviews: "The New England Country Store of the Eighteenth Century," New England Galaxy, Vol. V (Fall 1963), pp. 14-22; "Trinity College Moves to the New Campus," Trinity College Alumni Magazine, Vol. IX (January 1964), pp. 1-11; "Capsule College History: Trinity Site of 1964 (Psi Upsilon} Convention Activities," The Diamond of Psi Upsilon (Spring 1964), pp. 96-99; Book Reviews: A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth: Mourt's Relation of the English Plantation Settled at Plymouth (September 15, 1963); Isaac Hicks: New York Merchant and Quaker, Robert A. Davison (March 1,

31 1964); The Colonial Wars: 1689-1762, Howard Peckham (April 26, 1964)-all in the Hartford Courant. Public Lectures, etc.: St. Margaret's School, Waterbury, Conn., October 1963; Trinity Episcopal Church, Wethersfield, Conn., February 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Trustee, Historic Wethersfield Foundation; Library and Nominating Committees, Connecticut Historical Society; Consultant for Choice: Books for College Libraries. THOMAS E. WILLEY-Publications and Reviews: Weekly editorial page column on international affairs, The Hartford Times; Book reviews, The Hartford Times; Book review, Trinity College Alumni Magazine, June 1964. Public Lectures, etc.: "Germany and World War I: The Ludendorff Enigma," in first of History Department series commemorating the 50th anniversary of World War I, Trinity College, April 1964; Moderator on weekly television series, "The Editors," Channel 24, Connecticut ETV. Committee and Other Activities: Member of the Editorial Staff, The Hartford Times, September 1963 to January 1964. EDWARD W. SLOAN III-Publications and Reviews: Reviews: The Anatomy of British Sea Power, Arthur Marder, Vol. I, No. 1, p. 44; Great Britain and the German Navy, E. L. Woodward, Vol. I, No. 2, p. 79; St. Vincent & CamperdoWll, Christopher Lloyd, Vol. I, No. 3, p. 111; Signal 250: Sea Flight off Santiago, A. C. M. A20y, Vol. I, No. 3, p. 113; Four Years in the Confederate Navy, W. S. Hoole, Vol. I, No. 4-all in Choice: Books for College Libraries; Doc11- ments on American Foreign Relations, R. P. Stebbins, ed., September 22, 1963; Dawn Like Thunder: The Barbary Wars and the Birth of the U.S. Navy, Glenn Tucker, October 6, 1963; In Retrospect: The History of a Historian, Arthur Schlesinger, December 15, 1963; When the Cheering Stopped: The Last Years of Woodrow Wilson, Gene Smith, March 29, 1964; Aboard the USS Monitor: 1862, W. F. Keeler, April 12, 1964-all in the Hartford Courant. Public Lectures, etc.: "Mid-19th Century Marine Engineering," Mystic Sea· port, Mystic, Conn., July 1963. Meetings: Mississippi Valley Historical Association Annual Convention, Cleveland, Ohio, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Consultant in naval history and science for the New Campuses Program, University of California.

M A T H E M A T I c s (DR!. HAROLD L. DORWART) In celebration of the first year in the new McCook Mathematics-Physics Center, the Department of Mathematics (with aid from the Trinity Lecture Committee) sponsored the following lecture series in mathematics: December 9, "Trial and Error Learning on Computers," Dr. Harold Ahlberg, United Aircraft Corporation; February 13, "Graph Theory," Professor Oystein Ore, Yale University; February 25, "Some Insurance Models from Risk Theory and Other Sources," Professor Cecil J. Nesbitt, University of Michigan; February 26, "The Variance of Total Claims after Reinsurance," Professor Cecil J. Nesbitt, University of Michigan; March 12, "Transfinite Diameters," Professor Einar Hille, Yale University; March 12, "Determinative and Restrictive Inequalities," Professor Einar Hille, Yale University; April 16, "The Vicious Versus," Robert A. Rosen· baum, Dean of the Sciences, Wesleyan University; April 30, "On the Development of Modern Computer Languages," Mr. Alonzo G. Grace, Jr. '49, Radio Corporation of America. In addition, the following talks were given at the weekly colloquium for juniors by members of the faculty and by juniors majoring in mathematics. November 4, 'The Geometry of Incidence," Mr. Dorwart; November 11, "Finite Planes, Latin Squares, Perfect Difference Sets," Mr. Dorwart; November 18, "Perfect Numbers," Mr. Stewart; December 2, "Approximation by Rationals," Mr. Stewart; December 9 and 16, "The Frege-Russell Definition of Number," Mr. Poliferno; February 3 and 17, "Some New Polynomials and Their Properties," Mr. Klimczak; March 16 and 23, "Graphs of Modular and Distributive Lattices," Mr. Alvarez; April 6, "Basic Theorems in Riemann-Stieltjes Integration," Mr. Losse, '65; April 20, "A Propositional Calculus with Modality and an Algebraic Interpretation," Mr. Cook, '65; April 27, "Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for

32 Planar Geodesic Graphs," Mr. Chapin, '65; May 4, "The Bernoulli Distribution," Mr. Bushnell, '65; May 11, "Classification of Surfaces," Mr. Prentice, '65; May 18, "Mappings into the Sphere," Mr. Burr, '65. One of our graduating seniors, Edward ]. Mosher, received a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship for 1964-65. Mr. Mosher will study at Yale. A second year N.S.F. Fellowship was awarded to Thomas R. Berger, '63, who is a andidate for the Ph.D. degree at the California Institute of Technology. N.S.F. Honorable Mention was given to Raymond A. Orate, '63, now at Yale, and to D. E. Broadhead, who is a candidate for the M.S. in mathematics at Trinity. HAROLD L. DoRWART-Meetings: Northeastern Section of the Mathematical Association of America, Chairman of the Section, Kingston, R.I., November 1963. WALTER J. KLIMCZ.AK-Public Lectures, etc.: "English and American Folk­ songs for Children," Elm Hill School, Newington, Conn., June 1964. Meetings: Mathematical Association of America, Kingston, R.I., November 1963; Travelers Research Center Seminar, Hartford, November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Visiting Professor of Mathematics, Wesleyan University Graduate Summer School; Scholarship Committee, Greater Hartford Labor Council. ROBERT C. STEWART-Public Lectures, etc.: "The New Mathematics," Trinity Alumni Reading Program Seminar, Trinity College, June 1964. Meetings: Northeastern Section of the Mathematical Association of America, Kingston, R.I., November 1963. EMMET F. WHITTLESEY-Publications and Reviews: "Fixed Points and Anti­ podal Points," American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 70, No. 8 (October 1963), pp. 807-821. Meetings: Northeastern Section of the Mathematical Association of America, Kingston, R.I., November 1963; Annual Meetings of the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association of America, Miami, Fla., January 1964. STEPHEN P. HOFFMAN, ]R.-Publications and Reviews: in Mathematical Monthly: "Russian Reader in Pure and Applied Mathematics," Vol. 71, No. 3 (March 1964), p. 339; "Introduction to Set Theory and Topology," Kuratowski, Vol. 71, No. 3 (March 1964), p. 342; "The Real Numbers in an Algebraic Set­ ting," J.B. Roberts, Vol. 71, No. 4 (April 1964), p. 452; "Problem E1704" (with R. B. Killgrove), Vol. 71, No. 6 (June-July 1964), p. 680. Public Lectures, etc.: "False Theorems," Mathematics Colloquium, San Diego (Calif.) State College. Meetings: American Mathematics Society, Pasadena, Calif.; American Mathe­ matics Society- Mathematical Association of America, Miami, Fla., January 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Supervisor, Undergraduate Independent Study Program (NSF), Wesleyan University, summer 1964; Visiting Professor of Mathematics, San Diego (Calif.) State College, September 1963-April 1964. MARIO J. PoLIFERNo--Publications and Reviews: Review: The Real Number System, John M. H. Olmsted (New York, 1962), The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 70 ( 1963), p. 910. Public Lectures, etc.: "Religion and Modern Logic," Newman Club, Uni­ versity of Connecticut, November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Debate judge for the Atheneum Society at the University of Vermont Novice Tournament, December 1963. MARJORIE V. BUTCHER-Meetings: American Risk and Insurance Associa­ tion, Boston, Mass., December 1963; Actuaries Club of Hartford, West Hartford, September 1963, November 1963, and March 1964; Actuaries Clubs of Boston and Hartford, Hartford, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Chairman, Evening Division, United Church Women of Greater Hartford; National Council of Churches' Consultation on Church and Youth Employment; Official Board, Policy Committee, First Methodist Church, Hartford. LAURENCE R. ALVAREZ-Publications and Reviews: Basic Graphs of Finite Modular Lattices and Their Associated Undirected Graphs, Yale (Ph.D. in Mathe­ matics). Meetings: Mathematical Association of America, Kingston, R.I., November 1963. 33 M 0 D E R N L A N G U A G E S (DR. ARTHUR H. HUGHES and DR. GUS­ TAVE W. ANDRIAN, Co-Chairmen) Under the able direction of Professor Lawrence R. Stires, the language labora­ tory completed its first full year of existence smoothly and satisfactorily. Installed at the end of 1962 as one of the most modern laboratories in the country, its effcc· tiveness has already been proven. It has been used primarily by first year students, but also by intermediate and advanced students. Mr. Stires demonstrated the equipment to representatives of over two dozen schools and colleges located throughout the country. Through Professor Hans Frese, the Department established contact with the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst at Bonn, Germany. Through this office students may receive scholarships for a year's study in Germany or spend one year as teaching assistants in German high schools, teaching English and American History. Some of our German majors intend to apply for placement under this plan for the year 1965-1966. During the year, sabbatical leaves were granted to Professor Robert P. Water· man for the Christmas Term, and to Professor Michael R. Campo for the Trinity Term. Professor Arnold L. Kerson received his Ph.D. in Spanish from Yale in June 1963, and has been promoted to the rank of Assistant Professor effective September 1, 1964. After well over a decade of loyal service to his Department and College, Professor Louis H. Naylor stepped down as Co-Chairman, but continues to hue a full teaching schedule. Professor Gustave W. Andrian was named to succeed him. GUSTAVE W. ANDRIAN-Publications and Reviews: Modern Spanish Pros1 and Poetry, Editor, The Macmillan Company, March 1964. Meetings: American Association of Teachers of Spanish, Windsor, Coon., March 1964; American Association of Teachers of French, Middletown, Conn., May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Outside Examiner in French at Hartfonl College for Women; Editorial Consultant for French and Spanish texts for the Macmillan Company.

Loms H. NAYLOR-Meetings: Alliance fran~aise de Hartford, monthly med· ings; Dante Society of America, Cambridge, Mass., May 1964; American Associa· tion of Teachers of Italian, New England Branch, Trinity College, November 1963. MICHAEL R. CAMPO-Publications and Reviews: Translations: "Sixteen Yean of the Piccolo Teatro," by Strehler and Grassi (Tr. with Ruby Cohn), T11/a1 Drama Review, Vol. 8, No. 3 (Spring 1964), pp. 27-43; "An Interview with Ignazio Silone," Cesare Barbieri Courier, Vol. VI, No. 1 {Fall 1963), pp. 3-8; "I Pastori," Gabriele D'Annunzio, Cesare Barbieri Courier, Vol. VI, No. 1 (Fall 1963), p. 25; Editor, Cesare Barbieri Courier, Vol. VI. Honors, Grants, etc.: Sabbatical leave, Trinity Term, research and study ia Italy. Public Lectures, etc.: "Salvatore Quasimodo, Italian and Universal Poet," Lugano, Switzerland, March 1964. ROBERT P. WATERMAN-Honors, Grants, etc.: Sabbatical leave, Christmas Term 1963-1964, France, research in the Medieval French Theatre. Public Lectures, etc.: Several illustrated talks on Yugoslavia and France, The: Friendship Club, East Glastonbury Library Association, Glastonbury, Conn., Feb­ ruary, April, and June 1964; "France Today," Le Cercle Fran~aise, Trinity College, March 1964; Interview, WRTC, program on France, Trinity College, March 196". Meetings: Annual meeting of Les Amis De Roncevaux, Paris, Frana, December 1963; Annual meeting of American Association of Teachers of French, Connecticut Chapter, Middletown, Coon., May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Invited to participate in the Seminar Oil Medieval Liturgy, University of Paris, October 1963-Jaouary 1964. HANS F. FRESE-Public Lectures, etc.: "Germany Revisited," Rotary Oub, Wethersfield, Coon., October 29, 1963. Meetings: Examiner, Oral part of A.A.T.G. High School German contest, Hartford, April 1964; Meetings with members of the Akademischer Austauscb-

34 dienst, relating to placement of German majors as teachers in German secondary schools and recommendations for scholarships, Bonn, Germany, August 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Member, G.E.M. Advisory Board, Hartford; Chairman, G.E.M. Scholarship Committee; Member, Rotary Club of Wethersfield; Member, Rotary Program Committee; Member, Rotary Helping Hand Fund Com­ mittee; Member-at-large, Church Council, The First Church of Christ Congregational, Wethersfield, Conn. CARL V. HANSEN-Pttblications and Reviews: German Review Grammar with Exercises, Copyright by the Trustees of Trinity College ( 1963), 88 pp. Public Lectures, etc.: "Your Language and Language in General," The Gun­ nery School, Washington, Conn., September 1963. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Chapter, American Association of Teachers of German, Trinity College, October 1963; Joint Meeting of New England Chapters, .American Association of Teachers of German, Andover, Mass., May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: President, Connecticut Valley Chapter, .American Association of Teachers of German, October 1963 to Fall 1964; State Chairman of High School German Contest held annually under sponsorship of the .American Association of Teachers of German; Critical reading of textbook manu­ script for Dodd, Mead & Company. WALTER D. LEAVITT-Committee and Other Activities: Trinity College repre­ sentative at lOOth Anniversary of Bates College, November 20, 1963. DONALD D. HooK-Publications and Reviews: "A Further Analysis of the Keating Report," Connecticut State Department of Education, June 1964. Meetings: Communications Seminar, Hartford Seminary Foundation, Novem­ ber 1963; State Advisory Committee on Foreign Language Instruction, October and December 1963, January, February, March, April, May, and June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Testing Center Supervisor for the High School German Contest of the American Association of Teachers of German.

ARNOLD L. KERSON-Publications and Reviews: The Death of Artemio Cruz, Carlos Fuentes, Choice: Books for Coiiege Libraries, Vol. 1, No. 4 (June 1964), p. 136. Committee and Other Activities: Editorial advisory work for Macmillan Publishers. LAWRENCE R. STIRES, ]R.-Committee and Other Activities: Directed a play in Spanish with students from the Spanish Clubs of Trinity and St. Joseph College, West Hartford. ]AMES A. VACCARO-Honors, Grants, etc.: M.A. received from University of Wisconsin, June 1964. Meetings: American Association of Teachers of French, Wesleyan University, May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Role in the play, Alice, Connecticut Reper­ tory Company, Hartford, January 1964.

M U S I C (PROFESSOR CLARENCE E. WATTERS) During the first term the Professor of Music was absent on sabbatical leave. In his place were Mr. James L. Palsgrove as Lecturer in Music and Mr. John Bullough as Organist and Choirmaster of the Chapel. Mr. Palsgrove, a graduate of Wesleyan (A.B.) and of Yale (A.M.) con­ ducted courses in J. S. Bach, Harmony, and Appreciation of Music. Mr. Bullough, a graduate of Union Seminary (M.S.M.) was in charge of the music of the Chapel. Dr. Barber's work was increased by one section of Music Appreciation, by a seminar in Music History, and by Music Tutorial. During July and August Professor Watters visited England, Holland, Ger­ many, and France, gathering final material for two books: "Improvisation in the American ChUich" and "The Organ Works of Marcel Dupre." While in Europe he played several concerts both informal and formal. The first of the two boo1<:s

35 was largely completed by the end of January. It will be published in New York in the fall. The Trinity Term was marked by two outstanding public events arranged hr Professor Watters while in Europe. The first of these was an organ recital, November 20, by Mr. Geraint Jones of London, distinguished conductor, virtuoso, recording artist. The second, celebrating the Shakespeare anniversary, was a lecture by Dr. Frederick Sternfeld, Chairman of the Music Department of Exeter College in Cambridge and internationally prominent musicologist, April 21, on the topic "The Songs of Shakespeare and Their Origins." The Department takes this opportunity to express publicly its appreciation oE the Helen Loveland Morris Prize for Excellence in Music, established by Robert S. Morris '16. Mr. Morris' interest in music at Trinity has been a bright page ia the history of music at the College. The first award was made to James N. Grenhart '64 on Honors Day. Two students were graduated with Honors in Music: James N. Grenhart and Andrew C. Merryman. Mr. Merryman has been accepted for graduate study at Columbia University, where he will begin his work in September. To better unify the major in music, numerous meetings of all music majors were held, most significant of these being that with Dr. Sternfeld of Oxford con­ cerning graduate study in universities. Inaugurating a program towards advanced study, a seminar in music history was offered for credit during the Christmas Term and on a voluntary basis during ,the Trinity Term. The department faculty worked extensively during the year with individual students preparing for graduate work at other schools. With the active cooperation of Professor Engley, a substantial number oE important books on music and some musical scores were added to the Trinity College Library during the year. The Department wishes especially to thank James Grenhart and Andrew Merryman for their significant gift of the complete works of Guillaume de Machaut. The "extracurricular" activities of the Professor of Music included an aJ1. Gibbons Evensong in the Chapel by the Cantores Sancti, May 3, a recital ia Pompano Beach, Fla., May 10, and a recital in New York City, May 20th. At the request of the National Conservatory of Canada he examined candidates for the premiere prix in Quebec on June 10. Outstanding among the achievements of Dr. Barber was the publication oE "Les Oratorios de Marc-Antoine Charpentier" in the Recherches sur la Musiq., franfaise classique, III, Paris, 1963. In professional organizations Dr. Barber remains active as Membership Chairman of the College Music Society, as officer of the Mozart Festival Orchestra of New York. He attended the April meeting of the American Musicological Society and the June session of the Directors of Associated Male Choruses of America. Public lectures at Conard High School and at Loomis Institute were given by Dr. Barber at various times during the year. Student activity in public concerts was considerable and of uncommon quality. Individual students in the weekly organ recitals in the Chapel, the con­ tributions of the Trinity Chamber Players in concerts, in chapel services, ia concert and TV with the Glee Club, brought campus music to a high level of quantity and quality. The excellent quality of the Trinity College Band was demonstrated by splendid response from students, faculty and alumni, by an award from the Ruth L. Kinney Fund, by a Sena·te progress award. The "World's Longest Piano Recital" provided an opportunity for a number of students to play a great deal of music of high quality and brought unexpected response in nation-wide coverage by the press. The Glee Club, under Dr. Barber's direction, extended its reputation hr concerts beginning on Parents Day and concluded with an appearance at the World's Fair on June 6. Of unusual importance was the performance of the Charpentier Mass, "Assumpta Est Maria," with the Pine Manor Glee Club, November 10, in Boston. Final announcement of the termination of the Music Department as a separate entity to the Professor of Music was made in a letter from the President midway in June. It would, therefore, appear that the chapter in the history of the Music Department of Trinity College covering the years 1930-1964 is concluded. As of June of the present year the Department will be incorporated into the newly formed Department of The Arts.

36 CLAR£NCE H. BARBER-Publications and Reviews: "Les Oratorios de Marc­ Antoine Charpentier," Recherches sur Ja musique franfaise ciassique, Vol. III (Fall 1963), pp. 90-130. Public Lectures, etc.: "Music in the Renaissance," December 1963 and "Modern Music," Conard High School, West Hartford, February 1963; "Music in the Renaissance," February 1964; "Music in the Baroque," February 1964; "Music in the Classical Period," April 1964; "Music in the 20th Century" (2), April 1964 -all at Loomis Institute, Windsor, Conn. Meetings: American Musicological Society, Harvard University, April 1964; Associated Male Choruses of America, Directors' Meeting, New York, N.Y., June 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Officer, The Mozart Festival Orchestra, New York, N.Y. (2 meetings); Membership Chairman, The College Music Society; Concerts by the Trinity College Glee Oub, Boston, Mass.; Berlin, Conn.; Salis­ bury, Conn.; Southington, Conn.; Washington, D.C.; Baltimore, Md.; Haddon Heights, N.J.; Valley Forge, Pa.; Poultney, Vt.; Rutland, Vt.

PH IL 0 S 0 PHY (DR. BLANCHARD W. MEANS) This year has proven to be intensely active and stimulatingly successful in terms of philosophic instruction and general student interest. The Philosophy Club, in cooperation with the Department, brought distinguished speakers from Haver­ ford College, M. I. T., Smith College, and Yale University to the Campus for a formal lecture open to the college community and for an informal meeting with interested students. Last summer, through the excellent teaching of Dr. DeLong and of Dr. Lee, the Department participated in the Summer Engineering Labora­ tory, sponsored by the United Aircraft Corporation, at Trinity College. This proved to be such a satisfying innovation that it is to be repeated for a second Summer Session this year. As Dr. DeLong said of the part played by the Department in this new development, "The course afforded a complement to the engineering program. It exposed students to one of the humanities while at the same time it showed connections between science and philosophy. In this way it helped widen the student's borders, which in many cases were both narrow and almost exclusively technological." In addition to these various activities, the Department was concerned with further revision of courses in terms of the New Curriculum and with formulating a policy and a specific program for the General Examina­ tions in Philosophy. BLANCHARD W. MEANS--Public Lectures, etc.: "Greek Philosophy," three lectures at Loomis School, Windsor, Conn., October 1963; "The Intrinsic Meaning of Life," Simsbury, Conn., March 1964; "Modern Philosophy," three lectures at Loomis School, February 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Philosophical Association, Bloom.field, Conn., November 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Prudential Committee, Brook.field (Mass.) Congregational Church; Secretary, Board of Trustees, Hartt Musical Foundation of the University of Hartford, and Chairman of the Trustees' Committee on Edu­ cation; Secretary, Connecticut Beta of the Phi Beta Kappa Society; Council, the Founders of Hartford; Council, the Society of Colonial Wars in Connecticut; Member, Rules Committee of the Morgan Horse Club of Connecticut. MYRON G. ANDERSON-Public Lectures, etc.: "Some Concepts of Responsi­ bility" (Paper read at The Connecticut Valley Philosophical Association), Hart­ ford, November 1963; "Politics and the Cold War" (Series of radio discussions over WSCH-FM, moderated some), Hartford, October 1963-January 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Philosophical Association, Hartford, November 1963; American Philosophical Association (Eastern Division), Washington, D.C., December 1963. HowARD DELONG--Public Lectures, etc.: "Philosophy, Engineering, and the Space Age," New England Section, American Society for Engineering Education, Northeastern University, October 1963. Meetings: Connecticut Valley Philosophical Association, West Hartford, November 1963; American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, Wash­ ington, D.C., December 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Editorial Board of Social Science.

37 RICHARD T. LEE-Pttblic Lectures, etc.: "Freedom and Morality," National Conference of Christians and Jews, Hartford, October 1963; "Contemporary Morality," Canton (Conn.) Adult Education Council, November 1963; "Augustine" and "Aquinas," two lectures at the Loomis School, Windsor, Conn., November 1963; "Kierkegaard," "Nietzsche," and "Jean-Paul Sartre," three lectures at the Loomis School, May 1964. Meetings: Connecticut Philosophical Association, Hartford, October 1963. p H y s I c A L E D u c A T I 0 N (PROFESSOR RAY OOSTING) RAY OosTING--Public Lectures, etc.: "The Need for Carry-Over Sport Skills," Renbrook School, West Hartford, November 1963; "Physical Fitness for the Middle Age Group," Tabor Academy Alumni, March 1964. Meetings: New England Athletic Conference, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Eastern College Athletic Conference, New York, N.Y., December 1963; National Collegiate Athletic Association, New York, N.Y., January 1964; National Asso­ ciation of Basketball Coaches, Kansas City, Mo., March 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Chairman for Connecticut, National Basket­ ball Hall of Fame Committee. DANIEL E. JESSEE-Public Lectures, etc.: "The Value of Athletics in High Schools," American School for the Deaf, West Hartford, January 1964. Meetings: American Football Coaches Association Meeting, Buffalo, N. Y., June 1964; National Collegiate Athletic Association Football Coaches Meeting, New York, N.Y., January 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Ways and Means Committee, American Football Coaches Association; Third Vice President, American Football Coaches Association; Lecturer, Physical Fitness Council, American Tea Council and American Football Coaches Association. KARL KURTH-Public Lectures, etc.: "Physical Fitness for Our Older Citi­ zens," YMCA, Hartford, February 1964; "Recreation, Today and Tomorrow," Laurel School P.T.A., November 1963; "Recreation, Today and Tomorrow," Metacomet School P.T.A., November 1963-both in Bloomfield, Conn. Meetings: National Track Coaches Convention, National Football Coaches Convention, National Collegiate Athletic Association Meeting-all in New York, N.Y., January 1964; New England Intercollegiate Track Coaches Associa­ tion, Orono, Me., May 1963; Eastern Intercollegiate Track Coaches Association, Lewiston, Me., May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Vice President, New England Track Asso­ ciation; Secretary-Treasurer, Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Association; Trustee, Hartford Cancer Society; Chairman, East Hartford Cancer Crusade; Evaluation of Health and Physical Education Programs at Conard High School. RoY A. DATH-Meetings: New England Intercollegiate Soccer League, Cam­ bridge, Mass., December 1963; National Soccer Coaches Association, New York, N.Y., January 1964; Intercollegiate Soccer Football Association of America, New York, N.Y., January 1964; U.S. Olympic Soccer, New York, N.Y., February 1964; Kutsher's Coaches Clinic, Monticello, N.Y., June 1964; National Intercollegiate Squash Championship, Hanover, N.H., March 1964; New England Intercollegiate Tennis Association, Williamstown, Mass., May 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Intercollegiate Soccer Football Association of America, Executive Committee and Ethics Committee, 1964; National Soccer Coaches Association, Ethics Committee, 1964; Olympi~ Soccer Committee 1961- 1964; Chairman, Intercollegiate Soccer for Olympics; Vice President, New England Intercollegiate Tennis Association; Staff, Kutsher's Coaches Clinic; A. G. Spalding Tennis Advisory Staff. ROBERT D. SLAUGHTER-Meetings: National Collegiate Athletic Association Swimming Meeting, New Haven, Conn., March 1964; New England Intercollegiate Swimming Association Meeting, Amherst, Mass., March 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Registered Physical Therapist, State of Connecticut; National College Swimming Coaches Association; New England College Swimming Coaches Association; American Red Cross Aquatic Committee, Hartford; Director of Aquatic Program, Town of Bloomfield, Conn.

38 CHESTER H. MCPHEE-Meetings: U. S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association, New York, N.Y., December 1963; National Collegiate Athletic Association Lacrosse Rules Committee, New York, N.Y., December 1963; New England Inter­ collegiate Lacrosse Association, Boston, Mass., February 1964. Committee and Other Activities: President, New England Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association; National Collegiate Athletic Association Lacrosse Rules Committee. ROBERT E. SHULTS-Meetings: National Collegiate Athletic Association Basketball Coaches Convention, Kansas City, Mo., March 1964; Connecticut Coaches Qinic, August 1963. Committee and Other Activities: Religious Education Committee, First Church of Christ, Wetherslield, Conn.; Cub Scout Executive Board, Pack 135, Wethers­ field, Conn.

P H Y S I C S (DR. F. WOODBRIDGE CONSTANT) By the fall of 1963 the Physics Department was comfortably ensconced in the new Math-Physics Center, as it was then called. The formal dedication ceremonies took place in October, the principal address being given by Dr. Daniel Al.pert, '37, head of the Coordinated Sciences Laboratory of the University of Illinois and a Trustee of Trinity College. At further ceremonies held in June 1964, the building was officially named the McCook Mathematics-Physics Center, thereby honoring a family whose members have been not only loyal to the College but active in its affairs. During the past year the new quarters of the Department proved to be all that was hoped for. The increased space, modern facilities, and new equipment were most heartening to both faculty and students. This successful outcome is in large measure due to the tireless planning of Professor Robert Kingsbury. When Bob leaves us next fall to become Chairman of the Physics Department at Bates College we shall miss him very much, but we wish him success in his new job. In October 1963 four members of the Department, Professors Constant, Howard, and Lindsay, and Mr. Robert Miller, the last a physics major, gave a program on WTIC-TV in Hartford. This event was part of the series, "From the College Campus," and our particular topic was "Physics in a Liberal Arts College;" The program was illustrated with views of the new Math-Physics Center. During the year we had two distinguished visitors. The first was Dr. John Mathis, Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Wisconsin, who came as a Visiting Scientist sponsored by the Astronomical Society of America. In April we were happy to have with us Professor Walter D. Knight of the University of California at Berkeley. Professor Knight, a member of our Department from 1946 to 1950, was most helpful in relation to our plans for future research. We antici­ pate increased research activity and feel that this will strengthen our ability to prepare students for careers in physics. F. WOODBRIDGE CONSTANT-Publications and Reviews: "Fisica Teorica," Centro Estudianted de Ingenieria La Linea Reeta, Argentina (1964), 295 pp. Public Lectures, etc.: "Physics in a Liberal Arts College," WTIC-TV, Hart­ ford, October 1963. Meetings: American Physical Society and American Association of Physics Teachers-both New York, N.Y., January 1964. · Committee and Other Activities: Board of Directors, 20th Century Club, Hartford. ROBERT LINDSAY-Honors, Grants, etc.: Received NSF Research Grant (GP-2512) for continuation of researtjl on antilerromagnetic materials. Public Lectures, etc.: "Physics in a Liberal Arts College" (panel), WTIC-TV, Hartford, October 1963; Lectures on contemporary physics to students at Housa­ tonic Valley Regional Hi~h School under Visiting Scientist Program, Falls Village, Conn., April 1964; Chairman, Alumni Panel Discussion, "Modern Physics-Its Implications to Business and Industry," Trinity College, June 1964. Meetings: American Physical Society (New England Section), Middletown, Conn., October 1963; American Physical Society, New York, N.Y., January 1964.

39 Committee and Other Activities: Participated in special summer course ia experimental solid state physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Jmie and July 1963. ROBERT F. KINGSBURY-Meetings: The Commission on College Physia, Orono, Me., June 1963; American Association of Physics Teachers, Orono, Me., June 1963; American Physical Society, New York, N.Y., January 1964; Ameriaa Physical Society (New England Section), New Haven, Conn., October 1963; Ameri­ can Association of Physics Teachers (New England Section), Weston, Mass.. April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Member, Board of Education, Vemoa, Conn.; Secretary, Hartford Branch of RESA, 1963-64; Chairman for New England, Visiting Scientists Program in Physics for High Schools. ALBERT J. HowARD, JR.-Publications and Reviews: Reviews in •Journal of Chemical Physics: "Isotopic Thermal Diffusion Factor of Argon" (with R. Paal and W. W. Watson), Vol. 39 (1963), pp. 3053·3056; "Isotope Separation br Thermal Diffusion in Ternary Systems" (with W. W. Watson), Vol. 40 (1964), pp. 1409-1413; Bulletin of the American Physical Society: "Character of the 3.91 MeV State in p19" (with J. P. Allen, D. A. Bromley and J. W. Olness), Vol. 9 ( 1964), p. 68; "Gamma De-excitation Studies on the Low Levels of Ne23" (with D. A. Bromley), Vol. 9 (1964), p. 439; "Studies on the Low-Lying Levels rl Ar37" (with J.P. Allen and D. A. Bromley), Vol. 9 (1964), p. 440; "Conccnm. tion Dependence of the Isotopic Thermal Diffusion Factor of Helium" (with R. Paul and W.W. Watson), Vol. 9 (1964), p. 476. Honors, Grants, etc.: Administrator, Trinity College - United States Atomic Energy Commission; Nuclear Science Education Grant NSE 48-2-63. Public Lectures, etc.: "Physics in a Liberal Arts College" (with F. VI. Constant, R. Lindsay, and R. C. Miller) , in "From the College Campus," WTIC-TV, Hartford, October 1963; "Modern Physics-Its Implications to Busi­ ness and Education" (with H. D. Doolittle, R. Lindsay, and C. W. Walker), Trinity Alumni Seminar, Hartford, June 1964. Meetings: American Physical Society, New York, N.Y., January 1964; American Physical Society, Washington, D.C., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Research Scholar, Summer Research &. ciate, Yale University; Guest Research Associate, Brookhaven National Laboratorr­ Van de Graaff Accelerator. p s y c H 0 L 0 G y (DR!. M. CURTIS LANGHORNE) The Department of Psychology continues to show steady growth in the enrollment of students and in the number of students choosing to major in the Department. The program is one designed mainly to prepare students for gradm programs in the field but is enriched by several courses which serve as effectiw "service" courses for students planning to enter professional schools of business. law, medicine, and theology. Senior students have been accepted into graduate programs for 1964-65 at tilt University of California (Berkeley), the University of Michigan, the University of Tennessee, Texas Christian University, and Vanderbilt University. The program of the Department has been strengthened by the addition rl Dr. George C. Higgins, Jr., who holds a joint appointment with the C.Olltgt Counseling Service. M. CURTIS LANGHORNE-Publications and Reviews: Proceedings of the Third Annual Meeting of the New England Psychological Association, Amerfra Psychologist, Vol. 19, No. 4 (April 1964), pp. 282-283. Public Lectures, etc.: ~·Psychology Today," National Honor Society, Jonatbaa Law High School, Milford, Conn., September 1963; Moderator of Panel, "The Intellectual in Society," Hartford College, March 1964; "Getting Ready for the 21st Century," Martin Kellogg Junior High School PTA, Newington, Coma., April 1964; "Sleep and Dreams_," Newington Homemakers Club, April 1964. Meetings: American Psychological Association, Philadelphia, Pa., September 1963; New England Psychological Association, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Connecticut Psychological Association, Westport, Conn., June 1964.

40 Committee and Other Activities: Secretary-Treasurer, New England Psycho­ logical Association; Chairman, Public Information Committee, Connecticut Psy­ chological Association. 0. W. LACY-Publications and Reviews: "A Case History of an Under­ graduate Evaluation" (with Dr. J. Bard McNulty and Mr. John S. Waggett), The Journal of College Student Personnel, Vol. 4, pp. 238-241. Public Lectures, etc.: "The Use of Psychological Tests at Trinity," Brownell Club and Psychology Club, Trinity College-both in March 1964; "Trinity College Today," Alumni Association and Parents, Los Angeles and San Francisco, Calif., both in March 1964; "Psychology at Trinity," Trinity College Alumni Association and Parents, Chicago, 111., April 1964; "Trinity College Today," Trinity College Alumni Association and Parents, Detroit, Mich., April 1964; Chairman of session on "Student Participation in College Policy-Making and Government," National Association of Student Personnel Administrators, Detroit, Mich., April 1964. Meetings: Council of Representatives, American Psychological Association, Philadelphia, Pa., August-September 1963; Executive Committee, National Asso­ ciation of Student Personnel Administrators, Columbus, Ohio, October 1963, Olicago, 111., January 1964, and Detroit, Mich., April 1964; Williston Academy Conference on Education, Easthampton, Mass., October 1963; New England Per­ sonnel and Guidance Conference, Hartford, October 1963; New England Psycho­ logical Association, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Connecticut Psychological Association, Hartford, Berlin, Moodus, and Hampden, October, December 1963, January, February 1964; American College Personnel Association, San Francisco, Calif., March 1964; National Association of Student Personnel Administrators, Detroit, Mich., April 1964; Eastern Psychological Association, Philadelphia, Pa., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: President-elect and Program Chairman, Con­ necticut Psychological Association; Governor's Committee on Teen-age Drinking and Driving; Connecticut Representative to the Council of Representatives of the American Psychological Association; Member of the Steering, Elections, and Auditing Committees of the New England Psychological Association; Member, Executive Committee and Commissions on the Student and Social Issues and Financial Aids, National Association of Student Personnel Administrators; Plan­ ning Committee for the Danforth-sponsored Eight-College Conference on Student Mores; Advisory Board, Northern Student Movement; Member, Joint Committee on Relations between Psychology and Psychiatry in Connecticut. ROBERT D. MEADE-Publications and Reviews: "A Current Appraisal of Psychology as a Behavioral Science," American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. VII, January 1964; "Safari to the New Africa" (eight articles), Hart/ ord Courant, November 1963-January 1964; Book reviews, Hartford Courant. Public Lectures, etc.: "Independence and Responsibility," Mvomero, Tangan­ yika, July 1963; "The Age-Old, Old-Age Problem," Trinity Faculty Seminar, Trinity College, September 1963, and Wesleyan Psychological Colloquium, Middle­ town, Conn., March 1964; "Objectivity in International Studies," Westminster School, Simsbury, Conn., October 1963; "Groups in Harmony and Conflict," Trinity College, Hartford, November 1963 and March 1964; "Some Psychological Considerations in Africa," Westminster School, Simsbury, Conn., February 1964; "Brainwashing," Westport (Conn.) Women's Club, April 1964; "People of the Himalayas," Travelers Insurance Company Education Committee, Hartford, April 1964; "Freud's Concept of Love," Religion Seminar, Trinity College, April 1964; Radio and TV Interviews: WDRC, "Education in Africa," September 1963, "Voice of America," September 1963; WTIC, "Peoples and Problems in Africa," December 1963 (two programs) and January 1964 (two programs); WHNB-TV, "An Interview with Simon Adebo, Ambassador from Nigeria," November 1963; WTIC-TV, "Africa in Focus," February 1964 (two programs); WEDH-TV, "An Interview with James Donovan," February 1964; CBS-TV, "To Tell the Truth," February 1964; WINF, "A Psychologist Looks to India," April 1964; WRTC-FM, Atheneum's "Age of Decision" Program, September 1963, "Trinity .Abroad," October 1963, "From the Watkinson Library," November 1963, and Interview with Indian Peace Marchers, March 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Consultant, Westminster School's Leadership and World Society Program; Vice president, Greater Hartford Community

41 Ambassador Project; Committeeman, Canton Scouts; Editorial Consultant, Canadian Journal of Psychology; Editorial consultant, W. B. Saunders, publishers. AUSTIN C. HERSCHBERGER-Honors, Grants, etc.: One-year renewal of grant for undergraduate research (NSF G-22795) by the National Science Foundation. Public Lectures, etc.: "The College Student and the Companion Program," Sociology Class, Conard High School, West Hartford, December 1963; "Neurosis, Psychosis, Freedom and Responsibility," Fellowship Club, Unitarian Church, West Hartford, May 1964. · Meetings: New England Psychological Association, Boston, Mass., November 1963; National Science Foundation Conference of Undergraduate Research Project Directors, Minneapolis, Minn., November 1963; National Science Foundation Research Proposal Evaluation, Washington, D.C., November 1963; Eastern Psy~ logical Association, Philadelphia, Pa., April 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Coordinator for College Student Companion Program; Consultant to the Social Action Program of the Church of the Good Shepherd, Hartford; Director of Music and Vestryman, Grace Episcopal Church, Hartford. GEORGE C. HIGGINS, JR.-Publications and Reviews: "A Factor-Analytic Study of Some Dimensions of College Experience," Dissertation Abstract.r, Uai· versity Microfilms. Honors, Grants, etc.: Elected to Psi Chi, Honorary Psychology Society; Elected to Sigma Xi. Public Lectures, etc.: "What Is Clinical Psychology?" Hartford, November 1963; "Some Aspects of Cognitive Development in Children," Hartford, April 1964. Meeting.r: New England Psychological Association, Boston, Mass., November 1963; Eastern Psychological Association, Philadelphia, Pa., April 1964.

RE L I GI 0 N (DR. EDMOND LAB. CHERBONNIER) Although the Department of Religion was short-handed this year, owing to the loss of Dr. William A. Johnson, we were nevertheless able to offer a full com­ plement of courses, thanks to part-time help from Professors William Bradley and Robert Paul of the Hartford Seminary, Professor Robert Berkey of Mount Holyoke, and Professor Stephen Crites of Wesleyan. We were indeed fortunate to obtain such able and effective assistance. The monthly colloquia, begun by the Department last year, were continued. In order to keep the atmosphere informal, they are held in our Seminar Room, which has a capacity of 40. One of our aims being to encourage dialogue between the disciplines, it is gratifying that our own majors are usually outnumbered by students from other departments and that other members of the faculty are able to attend. We were particularly pleased that our speakers included Dr. Miller of the Physics Department and Dr. Lee of the Philosophy Department. This being the fifth year in which we have graduated majors in Religion, it is possible to make some generalizations about them. Following an inflated year or two, their numbers seem to have stabilized at about ten per class. Of these, two usually plan to enter the ministry-exactly the number anticipated when the Religion Major was established. Three or four others go on to graduate work ia law, medicine, business, or a Ph.D. program, while the remainder enter business or the Peace Corps. This year's senior majors were an especially alert and stimu· lating class. They included one Rockefeller Brothers Fellow and the author of an outstanding Honors Thesis. Members of the Department devoted a great deal of time this year to the search for two additional members, one to replace Dr. Johnson and the other to relieve the heavy student loan which the Department has carried for several years. After an extensive search, two strong appointments have been made: Dr. Albert C. Rabil, Jr., of Duke, B.A., Union Theological Seminary, B.D., and Columbia Uai· versity, Ph.D.; and Mr. Alan C. Tull, Qf Stanford University, B.A., and the General Theological Seminary, where he received his B.D. and M.A., and is com­ pleting his doctorate. Having reached what appears to be our optimum size, the

42 Department now looks forward to a period of consolidation during which to review, revise, and improve our program. The concrete steps which we take will be the subject of future reports. EDMOND LAB. CHER:BONNIER-P11blications and Reviews: "The Word of God," The Empirical Theology of Henry Nelson lVieman, edited by Robert W . Bretall (1963), pp. 265-280; Review: Theodore 0. Wedel, The Gospel in a Strange New World, American Theological Review, Vol. 46, No. 2 (April 1964), pp. 332-333. Public Lectures, etc.: "Biblical Ethics," Faculty of Theology, University of Manchester, England, June 1963; "The Biblical Conception of Good and Evil," Brown University, Providence, R.I., November 1963; Lectures on World Religions, Laymen's Institute, Hartford, March and April 1964; "Biblical Pragmatism," Society of Biblical Theologians, New York, N.Y., April 1964; Lectures on World Re­ ligions, American Youth Foundation, Shelby, Mich., August 1964. Meetings: Society of Biblical Theologians, New York, N.Y., November 1963 and April 1964; Colloquium in honor of Paul Tillich, New York, N.Y., March 1964. THEODOR M. MAUCH-Pnblications and Reviews: Review: M. A. Beek, Concise History of lst·ael: from Abraham to the Bar Cochba Rebellion, Choice: Books for College Libraries, Vol. 1 (July-August 1964), p. 196. Public Lectures, etc.: "The Search for Identity," a series of lectures at the National Youth Consultation of the Protestant Episcopal Church, Greenwich, Conn., September 1963; "A Sample Class in the Course, 'Introduction to the Bible,'" Tenth Annual Parents Weekend, Trinity College, October 1963; "The Judaeo-Christian Concept of Man," Conard High School, West Hartford, October 1963; "The Image of Man in the Bible," Senate Lecture Series, Trinity College, February 1964; "The Conditions of Freedom," Ethel Walker School, Simsbury, Conn., March 1964; "Biblical Faith and Christian Doctrine," a course in the Laymen's School of Religion, Vernon, Conn., April-May 1964; "Pivots for Achieve­ ment," Commencement Address at the Dwight School, Englewood, N.J., June 1964; "Method and Content When a Thinking Person Prays," a series of lectures at the North1ield League Conference, Northfield, Mass., June 1964. Meetings: Two semi-annual meetings of the Society of Biblical Theologians, New York, N.Y., November 1963 and April 1964; Colloquium in honor of Paul Tillich, New York, N.Y., March 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Treasurer, the Society of Biblical Theo­ logians. C. FREEMAN SLEEPER-Publications and Reviews: "The Crisis in Civil Rights," Trinity College Alumni Magazine, Vol. V, No. 3 (March 1964), pp. 8-10. Public Lectures, etc.: "Pussyfooting through a Revolution," Hartford Asso­ ciation Churchmen's Fellowship, January 1964; "God's Right-Hand Man," Depart­ ment of Religion Colloquium, February 1964; "The Pursuit of Excellence," National Honor Society Initiation, Cromwell (Conn.) High School, March 1964; "What Is Christian Social Action?" Naugatuck Valley Association, Waterbury, Conn., April 1964; "A Growing Christian in a Changing Culture," Central Asso­ ciation Churchmen's Fellowship, Plantsville, Conn., April 1964; "Contemporary Religious Thought," three lectures, Loomis School, Windsor, Conn., April 1964. Meetings: Society for Religion in Higher Education, Notre Dame, Ind., August 1963; U.S. Department of State Foreign Policy Conference, Boston, Mass., September 1963; Society of Biblical Literature, American Schools of Oriental Research, New York, N.Y., December 1963-January 1964. Committee and Other Activities: Cromwell Democratic Town Committee; Cromwell Board of Education; Executive Secretary, Committee on Christian Social Action, Connecticut Conference of Congregational-Christian Churches; Chairman, ocial Action Committee, Middlesex Association of Congregational-Christian Churches. All of which is respectfully submitted,

ARTHUR H. HUGHES Dean and Vice President

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