JRiNIRT'f COLLEGE LIBRAIU' ECEIVED · ocr 26 1984 ARTFORD, CONN. National Alumni Association EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

OFFICERS President Victor F. Keen '63, New York, NY Senior Vice President William H. Schweitzer '66, Washington, D.C. Vice Presidents Alumni Fund Peter A. Hoffman '61, New York, NY Campus Activities Jeffrey J. Fox '67, Avon, CT Admissions Susan Martin Haberlandt '71, West Hartford, CT Area Associations Merrill A. Y avinsky '65, Potomac, MD Public Relations Wenda Harris Millard '76, New York, NY Career Counseling Robert E. Brickley '67, West Hartford, CT Secretary-Treasurer Alfred Steel, Jr. '64, West Hartford, CT

MEMBERS B. Graeme Frazier III '57, Philadelphia, PA Megan O'Neill '73, West Hartford, CT Charles E. Gooley '75, Bloomfield, CT James A. Finkelstein '74, La Jolla, CA Richard P. Morris '68, Dresher, PA Robert N. Hunter '52, Glastonbury, CT, Ex-Officio Elizabeth Kelly Droney '79, West Hartford, CT

Athletic Advisory Committee Term Expires Edward S. Ludorf '51, Simsbury, CT 1984 Donald J. Viering '42, Simsbury, CT 1984 Susan Martin Haberlandt '71, West Hartford, CT 1985

Alumni Trustees Term Expires Emily G. Holcombe '74, Hartford, CT 1985 Marshall E. Blume '63, Villanova, PA 1986 Stanley J. Marcuss '63, Washington, D.C. 1987 Donald L. McLagan '64, Sudbury, MA 1988 David R. Smith '52, Greenwich, CT 1989 Carolyn A. Pelzel '74, Hampstead, NH 1990

Nominating Committee Term Expires John C. Gunning '49, West Hartford, CT 1984 Wenda Harris Millard '76, New York, NY 1984 Norman C. Kayser '57, West Hartford, CT 1984 Peter Lowenstein '58, Riverside, CT 1984 William Vibert '52, Granby, CT 1984

BOARD OF FELLOWS

Dana M. Faulkner '76, Guilford, CT 1984 George P. Lynch, Jr. '61, West Hartford, CT 1984 JoAnne A. Epps '73, Glenside, PA 1985 Scott W. Reynolds '63, Upper Montclair, NJ 1985 Ann Rohlen '71, Chicago, IL 1985 Bernard F. Wilbur, Jr. '50, West Hartford, CT 1985 Mary Jo Keating '74, Wilmington, DE 1985 Norman C. Kayser '57, West Hartford, CT 1986 H. Susannah Hesche! '73, Philadelphia, PA 1986 Charles E. Todd '64, New Britain, CT 1986 Robert Epstein '74, Cambridge, MA 1987 Andrew H. Walsh '79, Hartford, CT 1987 Trins!'YREPORTER Voll4.No.4(1SSNOl64398J)

Editor: William L. Churchill EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Associate Editor: Kathleen Frederick '71 Frank M. Child Ill Associate Editor: Roberta Jenckes Professor of Biology Sports Editor: David Nagle '83 Publications Assistant: Kathleen Davidson Gerald J. Hansen, Jr. '51 Director of Alumni & College Relations Consulting Editor: J. Ronald Spencer '64 Dirk Kuyk A ssociate Professor of English Articles Theodore T. Tansi '54

COMMENCEMENT '84 Susan E. Weisselberg '76 This year's senior class graduates with a unique style, and for the first time more women than men receive diplomas. Au­ Published by t he O ffice of Public Relations, Trinity thor Brendan Gill offers some merry College, H artford, 06106. Issued four times a year: Fall, Winter, Spring and Summer. words of wisdom in his commencement Second class postage paid at H artford, Connecticut. address. 8 The Trinity Reporter is mailed to alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends of Trinity College without REUNION REVISITED charge. All publication rights reserved and contents Another record crowd of alumni and may be reproduced or reprinted only by written per­ their families returned for spring reunion mission of the Editor. Opinio ns expressed are those of the editors or contributors and do not reflect the offi­ led by the venerable Class of 1934. Col­ cial position of T rinity College. lege photographer Jon Lester captures some of the weekend spirit in his photo essay. 17 ANEW KIND OF CONSERVATION By William Conway The general director of the New York Zoological Society, a pioneer in the spe­ cialty of zoo biology, tells about some ex­ traordinary efforts to preserve vanishing ~ildlife by captive propagation. 24

Departments

Along the Walk 2

Sports 30

Class Notes 31 Cover: At present rates of human exploitation, much of In Memory 47 the earth's wildlife is feeling the impact of environmental des truction. Some of the imaginative steps being taken to counter this trend are discussed in an article by William Photography by ]on Lester except as noted Conway on pages 24-30. Along the Walk Along the Wlalk Along the Walk Along the Walk

A RECORD YEAR creasing needs for student financial aid, alumni attention is focused on the Col­ FOR FUNDRAISING challenges alumni, parents, friends and lege and spirits are at their highest." corporations to achieve higher levels of Trustee David R. Smith '52 will be T oral gifts to T~inity topped out at giving. The College counts on the An­ Annual Fund chairman; Peter A. Hoff­ $4,971,134 in 1983-84, a new record for nual Fund when pr~paring the operat­ man '61 and Trustee William R. Peelle the College and up more than ing budget, which is $27.4 million for '44 are continuing as chairmen of the $622,000 from last year. Annual giving 1984-'85. Alumni Fund and the Business and In­ surpassed its goal for the seventh con­ Keys to a successful campaign in­ dustry Associates, respectively; and secutive year, with gifts from alumni, clude new as well as continued mem­ Trustee John H. Bennett will be new parents, friends and corporations to­ berships in The President's Circle and chairman of the Friends of Trinity talling $1,218,639. The Parents Fund The Founders' Society, as well as other Fund. was particularly outstanding, exceeding giving clubs; greater participations Wylie H. Whisonant, Jr. is Parents expectations by 28%, with a total of from alumni, particularly those in the Fund chairman; Mrs. William H. Cun­ $153,525 contributed. larger, more recent classes; and a spe­ ningham II and Norman C. Kayser are "The outstanding record of our An­ cial, increased effort by classes celebrat­ chairmen, respectively, for Parents and nual Fund is the result of hard work by ing reunions next June. Alumni President's Circle/Founders' our volunteer leaders - class agents The end of the fundraising period Society memberships. and others who believe in the impor­ will now coincide with Reunion. Ac­ tance of helping Trinity maintain its cording to Frank W. Sherman 'SO, di­ ADMINISTRATIVE margin of excellence," said President rector of Annual Giving, the decision APPOINTMENTS English. "We are grateful to them and was made "because it seems right to to the thousands of donors who con­ finish just after Commencement, when The following appointments have tinue to support the College." been made recently for continuing, Annual giving includes unrestricted full-time positions in the administra­ 2 gifts which are used to meet the operat­ tion. ing expenses of the College. NAOMI AMOS, faculty grants co­ Contributions to the endowment ordinator and assistant to the director and special funds totalled $3,752,495. of institutional affairs. Amos received This figure includes the $1 2 million her B.A. with high distinction and an gift of ornithological materials from M.A. from the Eastman School of Mu­ Trustee Emeritus Ostrom Enders of sic, University of Rochester. She has Avon, CT. done advanced studies in English and Leaders for the Annual Fund were music at three universities and was vis­ Trustees Morris Lloyd, Jr. '60, chair­ iting assistant professor of music, part­ man of annual giving, William R. time, during the 1983-84 academic year Peelle '44, chairman of the Business at Trinity. During that time she re­ and Industry Associates, and Peter A. searched and created a course in Amer­ Hoffman '61, chairman of the Alumni ican music for the music department Fund. Ira H. Washburn, Jr. headed the and American studies program at the Parents Fund, and Mrs. Walter H. College; previously, for Wesleyan Uni­ Gray led the Friends. Mrs. William W. versity's Graduate Liberal Studies pro­ Cunningham II was in charge of gram she had created a new course in Freshman Parent organization and piano literature. She was also supervi­ solicitation. Douglas T. Tansill '61 and sor of student piano teachers at W es­ Wylie H. Whisonant, Jr. were chairmen leyan. for the President's Circle/ Founders' JUDITH BRANZBURG, coordina­ Society solicitations for the Annual tor of the Women's Center. Branzburg Fund. is the Women's Center's first full-time coordinator; previously, the position HIGHER GOAL, was part-time. Branzburg received her SHORTER CAMPAIGN B.A. with Distinction from the Univer­ PLANNED sity ofRocheste~, her M.A. in English

• • ·- ft •• literature from the State University of Trinity has set a goal of $1.3 million .: ·.: .'7~~- ,~- :--·.... ~-~. New York at Stony Brook, and Ph.D. dollars for the 1984-85 Annual Giving '~.. - ~-,. ':~ . .. ·-.:~ in English literature from the Univer­ campaign, while planning to end the ;. - sity of Massachusetts. In the 1983-84 campaign a month earlier than has academic year she was visiting assistant been customary. -- ~- •• ;,. I professor of women's studies at Trinity The new goal, necessary to sustain SPORTS CAMP for youngsters ages and served on the curriculum subcom­ the academic program and meet the in- six and up attracted more than 100 at­ mittee of the Women's Studies Com- tendees to Trinity this summer. Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk

3

THE GRADUATION BALL for the Class of 1984, held during Senior Week in May, was the first event to take place on the new terrace of Mather Campus Center.

mittee at Trinity. She has also been a FM, the College radio station; co­ elected to Alpha Sigma Nu honor soci­ staff assistant in the Women's Studies sports editor of the IVY, the yearbook; ety, and M.Ed. from the Harvard Program at the University of Massa­ and a sportswriter for the Trinity Tri­ Graduate School of Education. Most chusetts, research assistant in the Five pod. Before becoming sports informa­ recently she was a freshman proctor College Black Studies/Women's Stud­ tion director, he was an announcer for and served on the board of freshman ies Faculty Development Seminar, and Dial-Sports in Southampton, PA, writ­ advisors at Harvard, and as an inter­ managing editor of Massachusetts Stud­ ing and announcing sports news re­ viewer in the office of admissions and ies in English. ports. He has completed sports financial aids of Harvard/ Radcliffe. CATHERINE A. COSGROVE, de­ internships at WFSB-TV in Hartford, Prior to this, she was assistant director velopment coordinator. A 1983 Trinity and WIP-AM in Philadelphia, and was of admissions for three years at Boston a broadcaster for WKVU-AM in Vil­ University. graduate, she was a member of the var~ sity swimming team, and the Student lanova, P A, where he did basketball BRIAN RIEGER, technical director, Government Planning Board, and was play-by-play and color commentary. the Austin Arts Center. Rieger re­ a resident assistant and research assis­ While in high school he did sportswrit­ ceived his B.A. from Wesleyan Univer­ tant in psychology in her senior year. ing for the Main Line Times in Ard­ sity in theatre and English, and was In her junior year she studied in Mad­ more, PA. technical director for the Wesleyan rid, Spain, teaching English there. JANE E. REYNOLDS, assistant di­ Graduate Liberal Studies Program be­ DAVID G. NAGLE, sports informa­ rector of admissions. Reynolds received fore joining the Trinity administration. tion director. A 1983 Trinity graduate, her B.A., cum laude, from the College MART HA L.A. STASSEN, assis­ Nagle was sports director for WRTC- of the Holy Cross, where she was tant director of admissions. A 1981 Along the Walk ~'\long the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk

cum laude graduate of Macalester Col­ in political science, was a residential as­ founding member and first president of lege, Stassen was an admissions officer sistant, legislative intern, and commu­ the Hemingway Society, which held its at Macalester for two years, and prior nity programs intern for United first international conference in Spain to that, an organizer and lobbying in­ Technologies.Corporation. She was in June. Smith is also the editor of a tern for the Minnesota Public Interest appointed development coordinator in textbook, Anatomy of Literature, which Research Group. 1982. was published in 1972. RAMONA F. STILLEY, assistant to CINDY L SA FORD, to assistant He has been an active member of the director of admissions. Stilley re­ in academic computer operations. San­ The College Board and is former chief ceived her B.A. with honors in politi­ ford received her associate's degree reader for the advanced placement ex­ cal science from Trinity in May. She from Manchester Community College aminations in English language and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and Pi and B.S. in business administration composition. Smith has served as con­ Gamma Mu honor societies and from Central Connecticut State Uni­ sultant to secondary school systems in named a President's Fellow in political versity. She worked for United Tech­ several states on English curricula. science in addition to being an Illinois nologies for several years before joining Scholar. As an undergraduate she was Trinity in 1980 as secretary to the di­ a teaching assistant and resident coor­ rector of institutional affairs and PROMOTIONS AND dinator, supervising a group of resident SINA. Most recently she has served as TENURE GRANTED assistants. grants coordinator and secretary to the KATHERINE WOLF, coordinator director of institutional affairs. Three faculty promotions to tenured of social science computing. Wolf grad­ rank of associate professor were an­ uated magna cum laude from Brandeis nounced recently by the Appoint­ University, where she was elected to ments and Promotions Committee. Phi Beta Kappa, and will receive her MARDGES BACON has been pro­ Ph.D. in physical anthropology from moted to associate professor of fine arts in December. She has 4 and American studies. Bacon received been a guest instructor at South Cen­ her B.A. from the University of Dela­ tral Community College in Connecti­ ware, M.A. from the University of cut and a teaching fellow in Michigan, and Ph.D. from Brown Uni­ anthropology at Yale. The author of versity. A specialist in modern and numerous abstracts and publications, American architectural history, she she has been a research associate and also teaches American painting and ur­ computer programmer in the psychol­ ban architecture and planning. Her ogy department at Yale for the past first book, Ernest Flagg : Beaux-Arts Ar­ three years. chitect and Reformer, was published last The following have received promo­ year. tions in the Trinity administration: FRANCINE BRETON, to manager CHARLES W. LINDSEY, III has been promoted to associate professor of of user services, academic word proc­ economics. Lindsey received his B.S., essing. Breton has studied at Greater M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the Uni­ Hartford Community College and joined the development office as a sec­ versity ofTexas. He has conducted re­ search in the Phillippines on the retary in 1981 and was promoted to of­ SMITH NAMED transnational corporation, supported fice supervisor the same year. Most GOODWIN PROFESSOR by a Fulbright-Hays Research Grant, recently she has served as supervisor in and was a Research Fellow at the Insti­ development and administrative word Dr. Paul J. Smith, a member of the tute of Southeast Asian Studies in Sin­ processing. faculty since 1959, has been named gapore, continuing his work on foreign ROBERTAN. JENCKES, to associ­ James J. Goodwin Professor of English. investment. ate director of public relations. A grad­ Smith succeeds Dr. J. Bard McNulty, uate of the University of Rhode Island, who retired from the faculty last May. MARK P. SILVERMAN has been Jenckes was an associate editor of the The Goodwin professorship was estab­ awarded tenure as associate professor West Hartford News and later publica­ lished at Trinity in 1917 by Mrs. James of physics. Silverman received his B.S. tions assistant in the advertising and J. Goodwin of Hartford in memory of and M.S. degrees from Michigan State public relations department of Con­ her husband, who was a trustee of the University and Ph.D. from Harvard necticut General Life Insurance Com­ College from 1870-1878. University. He taught at the Univer­ pany (now CIGNA) before joining the Smith, a graduate of the University sity of California, Harvard, Wesleyan Trinity administration in 1979 as as­ of Rochester, earned his doctorate in University, and the Ecole Norm ale Su­ sistant director of public relations. English at Harvard University. He is perieure in Paris before joining the RHEA JO PINCUS, to capital cam­ the author of numerous articles on Trinity faculty in 1982. He has written paign coordinator in development. A American literature, particularly the numerous articles for technical publica­ 1982 Trinity graduate, Pincus majored works of Ernest Hemingway. He is a tions, and presented papers at profes- Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk

5

AUTHOR SEEKS incidents and clear photos showing V-12 trainees on the V-12 MEMORABILIA Trinity College campus in 1943-45. Photos ofV-12s in prox­ imity to a campus landmark are especially valuable. Please For a book on the Navy V-12 program during World War respond to: James G . Schneider, 888 Cobb Boulevard, Kan­ II, an author is seeking human interest stories, humorous kakee, Illinois 6090 !.

sional meetings of the American TWO FELLOWS Boston. He is also adjunct assistant Physical Society and the Optical Soci­ APPOINTED professor of psychology at Northeast­ ety of America. ern University and the University of Robert Epstein '74 and Andrew H. Massachusetts. He has edited two George F. Will '62, Pulitzer Prize Walsh '79 have been appointed to books of writings by B.F. Skinner and winner and syndicated colum­ three-year terms on Trinity's Board of has published articles on learning, the nist, will address a meeting of Fellows. history of psychology, self-control, and The President's Circle and The The Board of Fellow~ is a committee other topics in a number of distin­ Founders Society in New York of 12 alumni who serve in an advisory guished journals. City on Wednesday, December capacity to the trustees and College Walsh graduated with honors in his­ 12. He will provide an overview administration. tory and was named outstanding sen­ of the 1984 Presidential election. Epstein, who received his Ph.D. from ior history student at Trinity. As an Further details will be provided fiarvard University in 1981, is the undergraduate he was editor of The in the near future. Members of founder and executive director of the Trinity Tripod, served on the Presi­ these giving clubs are asked to Cambridge Center for Behavioral dent's Special Council on Women, and reserve this date. Studies in Cambridge, MA, and the as­ was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha. sociate director of the Foundation for Since graduating in 1979, he has Research on the Nervous System in worked for The Hq-rtford Courant, as Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk

bureau reporter and then bureau chief than $65,000. More than $10,000 of Sickinger has won the Holland Schol­ in Enfield, CT, and currently as reli­ this amount has been contributed in arship. gion writer. He has also been a part­ the past year. Tateronis is a political science major time lecturer in journalism at Central Thanks to the efforts of the late John from Auburn, MA. He also won the Connecticut State University. Mason, and to regular reminders from Holland Scholarship last year. classmates Chuck Kingston, Andy On­ CAPITAL, ILLINOIS derdonk and John Kelly - and most ELDERHOSTEL SCHOLARSHIPS especially, because of the generosity of EXPANDS the class- the Class of 1934 fund has grown to its present size - and will TOPERUGIA Four students from the Hartford area continue to grow. A number of mem­ have been awarded Capital Area Trinity's Elderhostel program, which bers of the class have designated the Scholarships to attend Trinity this fall. began on the Hartford campus in 1981 fund for bequests. These scholarships, which have been and expanded to the Rome campus in In addition to supporting the class awarded annually for twenty-five years, 1983, found a new site in Perugia, Italy, fund, '34 has given generously to the are presented to students from the this summer. Alumni Fund. This is evidenced by the Capital region on the basis of academic The Perugia program, which was or­ number of times that this class has cap­ achievement and need. They provide ganized and directed by Professor Mi­ tured back its own trophy, the Class of recipients with financial grants for the chael R. Campo of the modern 1934 Alumni Fund Trophy. full amount of their need for four years languages department, consisted of Other classes, including 1936, 1938, at Trinity. two, two-week sessions in June and 1939, 1944, 1959, 1962, 1963 and 1966, For the third year, the scholarships July. The curriculum included courses have followed the lead of the Class of are being underwritten by area corpo­ in Umbrian art, modern Italian his­ 1934 by establishing funds to which rations under the Capital Area Corpo­ tory, Etruscan civilization and political class members may add over the years, rate Scholars program. Participating and social problems of Italy. Faculty 6 and for which a purpose will be estab­ companies include: Cigna, The Hart­ were recruited from Trinity's Rome lished at a major reunion. ford Insurance Group, Dexter, Em­ campus and the University of Perugia. hart, Connecticut National Bank, Dr. Borden W. Painter, Jr., Trinity's United Technologies, The Aetna HOLLAND SCHOLARS acting dean of faculty, taught in both Foundation, Coleco Industries, Inc., NAMED Perugia and Rome. Eighty-two Elder­ The Barnes Group, Inc., The Hartford hostelers, all Americans, participated Courant Foundation, and The Heu­ The highest-ranking members of the in the program. blein Foundation. sophomore, junior and senior classes Meanwhile, Trinity Elderhostels con­ This year's scholars are: Lisa Alvarez­ have been named the Holland Scholars tinued in Rome, where 264 students at­ Calder6n of Collinsville (Granby High for 1984-85. They are: Susanne C. tended four, two-week sessions, and in School), Constantine Andrews of Hupfer '87, James P. Sickinger '86, and Hartford, where about 200 students Newington (Newington High School), Craig M. Tateronis '85. came to campus during the five-week Marlene Murphy of Wethersfield The Holland Scholarships are program. (Wethersfield High School), and James awarded annually and entitle the recip­ Trinity faculty continue to give the O'Laughlin of Manchester (Manches­ ients to full remission of their tuition older students rave reviews. Economics ter High School). for the year. The scholarships are Professor Robert A. Battis, who taught Three students have been awarded Il­ funded from a bequest by Mrs. Frances a course on the economics of the So­ linois Scholarships. These scholarships, ]. Holland, the daughter of Thomas viet Union, found the hostelers "in­ established in 1948, are given to Illinois Brownell, founder of the College. quisitive," and "with the wealth of residents on the basis of academic cre­ Hupfer, a sophomore from Wethers­ human experience" that undergradu­ dentials and need. fie ld, CT, was a National Merit ates don't have. "Some were second The students are: Catherine Daly of Scholar. Last semester, she was generation Americans, with fami ly Decatur (St. Theresa High School), awarded a prize for excellence in Ger­ roots in the Ukraine, and that intensi­ John MaHaney of Morris (Morris High man as well as The Chemical Rubber fied their interest in my subject mat­ School), and Charles Valentincic, Jr. Company Award for outstanding ter," he says. "And, they were awake at of Wadsworth (Lake Forest Academy). achievement in general chemistry. She 8:30am!" sings with the Hartford Saengerbund, Elderhostel is an educational pro­ CLASS OF '34 a German choral group in the area. gram for adults over 60 years of age Sickinger, a classics major from West with an interest in a low-cost, vacation SCHOLARSHIP FUND Simsbury, CT, is a member of the var­ learning experience. Started in 197 5, sity football team and was awarded a Elderhostel has expanded to 700 cam­ The Class of 1934 has designated its letter last year. A Capital Area puses in the U.S. and several foreign Fiftieth Reunion Fund for scholarships. Scholar, he has received prizes for ex­ countries. The fund, started in June, 1959, at cellence in Greek, Latin and mathe­ Trinity is the only college offering their 25th Reunion, now totals more matics. This is the second year Elderhostel programs in Italy and fur- Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk Along the Walk

ther expansion is expected, says gram in the Veneto region ofltaly next gram or those at other schools, contact Campo, who is working with Elderhos­ summer. Elderhostel, 100 Boylston Street, Suite tel headquarters on launching a pro- For information on the Trinity pro- 200, Boston, MA 02116.

ALUMNI CHILDREN__:_ CLASS OF 1988

Class of '50 liam S. Dunning, son of Peter Dunning; Elizabeth E. Jennifer L. Blum, daughter of Robert M. Blum. Hardman, daughter of G. David Hardman, Jr.; Brendan T. Shea, son of Brendan T. Shea. Class of '51 Class of '60 7 Diana C. Mercer, daughter of David M. Mercer. Stephen U. Brush, son of Robert 0. Brush; Catherine Class of '52 B. Chase, daughter of David W. Chase; Eleanor M. Lloyd, daughter of Morris Lloyd, Jr.; Maria L. Pede­ Diane M. DePatie, daughter of Thomas C. DePatie; manti, daughter of Robert A. Pedemonti; Virginia R. Ruth E. Taylor, daughter of David M. Taylor. Spahr, daughter of Robert N. Spahr. Class of '54 Class of '61 Curt R. Anderson, son of Robert C. Anderson; Andrea Gregory W. Druckman, son of Richard Druckman; Gre­ E. Bruce, daughter of William A. Bruce; Lorinda M. gory LeStage, son of Donald LeStage Ill; Michael New­ Russo, daughter of Carmelo G. Russo; Elizabeth Van­ berg, son of Neil R. Newberg; Deborah C. Smith, Lanen, daughter of Charles H. VanLanen. daughter of David W. Smith; Andrew R. Waxler, son Class of '55 of Edward B. Waxler (deceased). Mathieu J. Newlin, son of John B. Newlin. Class of '62 Class of '56 Nathalie D. Fraise, daughter of George R. Fraise; Janet L. Kapouch, daughter of John W. Kapouch. Kimberly W. Coursen, daughter of Franklin H. Cour­ sen; Anne R. Mongillo, daughter of Stephen A. Mon­ Class of '63 gillo; Charles C. Stehle, Jr., son of Charles C. Stehle, Jennifer T. Brewster, daughter of David C. Brewster; Sr. William C. Howland, son of William C. Howland. Class of '57 Class of '65 Alexandra E. Beers, daughter of David B. Beers; Joseph Jennifer James, daughter of Robert C. Wallis; Allen R. P. Cataldo, son of Paul A. Cataldo; Celinda C. Shan­ Neilsen, son of Allen R. Neilsen; Wendy M. Rawlings, non, daughter of Walter C. Shannon. daughter of David L. Rawlings. Class of '58 Class of '66 Carrie U. Buswell, daughter of Jeremy W. Buswell; An­ Christopher T. Chappell, son of Thomas M. Chappell ; nika K. Smith, daughter of Peter C. Smith. David H. Lloyd, son of David Lloyd.

Class of '59 Class of '72 Jennifer Campion, daughter of Paul S. Campion; Wil- Tara Libera, daughter of Raymond J. Libera. Commencement '84

s every class at Trinity seems to develop.a unique program had ended. An audience of several thou­ A style and history, so, too, do the commence­ sand enjoyed the witty and sage remarks of Com­ ments which signal their entrance into the world at mencement speaker Brendan Gill, noted critic and large. The 158th Commencement, and the Class of author, and applauded the accomplishments of the '84 were no exception. graduates. Particularly noteworthy were the This year's ceremony May 20th was marked by achievements of Valedictorian Ian McFarland, a fortuitous cooperation from the elements on a classics major from Marlborough, CT. McFarland damp, overcast day which saw brief sprinklings at earned the Holland Scholarship for three consecu­ noon and heavier showers shortly after the formal tive years as the student with the highest average in

8 WALKING TALL are, left, a just-initiated member of the Class of '84, and two women carrying yellow roses.

9 MARGARET R. STEELE '84 of Skillman, NJ represented her class in the presentation of the Class Gift to the Col­ lege. The Class chose to add its gift of over $2,000 to the Senior Class Scholarship Fund started by the Class of '82. President English, right, accepted on behalf of the College. At right, the 414 members of the Class of '84 process to the Quadrangle for the morning Baccalaureate.

his class, received numerous prizes and awards as an undergraduate, and on graduation was awarded the W.H. Russell Fellowship and a Thomas F. Watson 10 Fellowship for study in Europe. In addition to being named Valedictorian, McFarland had earned the distinction of Optimus - for attaining the grade of A- or better in-all required courses. Salutatorian Margaret Reimer earned the distinction of Optima as well. The Class of '84 blazed its own historic trail: for the first time there were more women graduates (212) than men (202). In addition, the Senior C lass Committee introduced some innovations to the tra­ ditional senior activities. In an effort to build class identity and spirit, according to committee member Jane Melvin '84, the group planned the first event, a Sunday champagne brunch, to be held in March. To the senior week activities in May they added an evening cruise along the Connecticut River and ar­ ranged to have the Senior Ball held outside on the patio of the newly-renovated Mather Campus Cen­ ter. Finally, on Commencement Day the committee gave a single yellow rose to every woman graduate. Members of the Class of '84 also gave generously to the Class Gift, contributing over $2,000 to the Senior Class Scholarship Fund, which was started by the Class of '82. This scholarship goes to a rising senior who has never received financial aid but re­ quires it in the senior year. This year's undergraduate degree recipients came from 29 states, the D istrict of Columbia, and four foreign countries. Of the Class's 414 members, 141, or approximately one-third, were from Connecticut. In addition, there were 29 recipients of master's de­ grees and six individuals who were awarded honor­ ary degrees. THE RT. REV. CLARENCE N. COLERIDGE, Bishop Suffragan of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut, delivered a stirring, insightful Baccalau­ reate sermon, while, below, a family examines a precious document.

II 12 HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS, flanked by Board Chairman Edward A. Montgomery, Jr., left, and President James F. English, Jr., are: Brendan Gill, William H. Mortensen, Clarence N. Coleridge, Bernard Bailyn, Margaret E. Murie, and Samuel H. Evison '12.

HONORARY DEGREES

BERNARD BAILYN, Adams University Professor of BRENDAN GILL, Theatre Critic, ; History at Harvard; Doctor of Humane Letters - Doctor of Letters- "Though you modestly dismiss " ... for thirty-one years you have helped the students your accomplishments as merely 'colliding with good of Harvard rediscover the early history of their country times at every turn,' you have practiced the writer's ... Interpreter of the colonial era and the American craft with remarkable deftness and versatility as a nov­ Revolution, you possess what has been described as a elist, reporter, playwright, poet, critic, short-story 'splendid gift for pertinent curiosity.' " writer, historian and biographer."

CLARENCE N. COLERIDGE, Bishop Suffragan of the WILLIAM H. MORTENSEN, first Managing Director Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut; Doctor of Divinity of the Horace Bushnell Memorial Hall; Doctor of Laws - "Though your roots are in Guyana, you have spent - "For some four decades your imaginative entrepre­ the better part of your professional life ministering to neurship and assured taste enriched the cultural and the needs of urban residents in the Northeast corridor civic life of Hartford ... and brought to your native of the United States." city exciting programs of astonishing diversity."

SAMUEL H. EVISON '12, former Chief of Information, MARGARET E. MURIE, Conservationist and Author; National Park Service; Doctor of Humane Letters - Doctor of Humane Letters - "You have been called "In the more than seventy years since you received a national treasure and included among the greats of your first Trinity degree, you have pioneered in the the conservation movement. You have also been de­ preservation of the natural and historic resources of scribed as a connoisseur of swimming holes, a cookie our country." baker extraordinary and ... a creature of nature." THE PRESIDENT'S CHARGE TO THE CLASS OF 1984

V ou have nearly finished your time as students at ~ Trinity, and perhaps as formal students any­ where. I'm sure it's a happy period in your lives, but perhaps a somewhat scary one, as well. I suspect that right now there is a big question in your minds, and that is: "What will happen to me next? What can I expect? Can I, like the person in the proverb, expect to be healthy, wealthy, and wise?" Let's think for a minute about your expectations. Can you expect to be healthy? Almost certainly yes. You live in a time when people have learned to under­ stand the body, to cure it of many ills, and to alleviate its pain. Take care of it, and it will last you much longer than the finest motor car that was ever built. And help take care of the world's body, too. In the nuclear age we are all uncomfortably prone to suffer together the great and final common accident. So make the world's health your concern also. Can you expect to be wealthy? Almost certainly no. But you do live in a society in which, if you apply IN HIS ADDRESS to the Class President English exhorted the graduates to expand their knowledge and develop high yourself, you will have all that you need: clean shelter, expectations for themselves. Below, a proud family poses comfortable clothes, and interesting, nourishing food. with its graduate. 13 You can raise a family, go places, see and learn things. Remember, that you do not have to own Cape Cod in order to walk on the beach. Can you expect to be wise? Yes, almost as wise as you choose to be. You live in a place where there is no book you cannot borrow and almost no play you can­ not see or concert you cannot hear, right in your own home; a place where history screens itself before your very eyes. You have formed a solid foundation of knowledge here at Trinity College; so delight in the expectation that it will grow constantly broader and deeper in years ahead. It need never stop growing, no matter how old or feeble or indigent you become. Perhaps you have one final question: Can you ex­ pect to be happy? Of course you can. You are blessed to be a human being, with the capacity to work and learn and create and love. You live in a world - or a part ~f the world- in which the real physical necessi­ ties of life will be yours, almost for the asking. So do not frustrate yourselves with unnecessary worries or unrealistic expectations about the unimportant things you do not truly need and are beyond your control. But cultivate high expectations for yourselves and for the important things within your control. I know that these expectations will be realized abundantly in your lives, and tj:lat you will fihd a happiness and a fulfill­ ment which will delight us who remain at Trinity, who have known you, and who wish you true success with all our hearts.

James F. English, Jr. May 20, 1984 14

THE COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS by Brendan Gill

h, how lucky I am to be here. A Doctor at last! that moment on, he began to take a certain pride in 0 And in my home town, too. My father was a my peculiar accomplishment. After all, I had become real doctor here in Hartford, a sawbones, who could a superlative of a kind. As between one superlative chop people up and put them together again. But I and another, worst has precisely the same value as never for a moment hoped to follow in his footsteps. best. For one thing, I couldn't stand the sight of blood. Once when ·one of our sons was being interviewed And I suppose nothing could be less reassuring for a by the dean of admissions at Yale, the dean turned to patient than to have a surgeon pass out cold just at me and asked me what class I had been a member of, the moment he was starting to operate. For another and when I said "1936" he groaned and said, "Oh thing, I was too scatterbrained a student to achieve God, we were scraping the bottom of the barrel that the discipline required of a doctor. When it came to year!" And so they were. mastering a subject I always tended to fall back upon To show you what a miserable student I was, and improvisation instead of scholarly diligence. how unjustly fortunate I was in my schoolhood days: When I was studying mathematics at the Kingswood my senior year at Yale, I had cunningly worked my School here, I was the despair of my teacher, Mr. way down to taking a single course, which met but McGuinn, because I used to make up the answer first once a week. Moreover, I was the only student in the and work my way back to the proposition. One year, course, which had to do with seventeenth century taking my college boards in geometry, I received a 32, lyric verse in England. I had written but a single pa­ the lowest grade given to anybody in the entire per, when my poor professor shot and killed himself. United States that year. Up to that time Mr. Mc­ Not because of my paper, I assure you, but for more Guinn had been thoroughly ashamed of me. But from appropriate reasons. Because he had given me a high The Class of '84 hears merry words of wisdom from a distinguished Hartford son.

grade on that paper, and because the English depart­ are far from living in that ideal society. Neither in our ment didn't know what else to do with me, that single personal lives nor in our professional lives are we al­ grade became my so-called average for the year. And lowed to be at ease with ourselves. "To loaf and invite so I was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and to other, our souls," as Whitman said. Instead we pitch into a totally undeserved honors. headlong pursuit of what William James long ago And now you know why I said at the beginning of called the "bitch goddess success" - that fierce rat these remarks how lucky I feel to be standing here race which nobody wins, though one rat may emerge today, characteristically embezzling a degree, while all ahead of another as he plunges into the grave. of you have spent hard years earning yours. We live today in an age of hype, an age in which as Or am I wrong? Are you all improvident scamps like Andy Warhol has said, "Everybody deserves to be fa­ me? Have you discovered how easy life can be? If in­ mous for fifteen minutes." And what follows from this stead of being difficult, you simply put your shoulder proposal is something familiar to all of you: that the to the wheel and not push, and the wheel gives way. person we recognize as a celebrity is someone who is On an occasion like this, I am supposed to strike a famous for being well-known. It is an age, as Adlai serious, if indeed not a solemn note, and to warn you Stevenson pointed out, in which a man has to prove that they are not long, the days of wine and roses. himself unfit for public office in order to be elected to Well, fiddle-faddle! We spring from a Puritan culture. it. Hype has everything to do with making good, but And we cast a fearful eye upon merry occasions, sure that sooner or later we must be severely punished for having enjoyed ourselves. That was how people felt here in Hartford when I was growing up, and perhaps they still do. But between you and me, they are radi­ cally wrong. Some years ago, I set down my conviction that not a shred of evidence exists in favor of the argument 15 that life is serious, though it is often hard and even terrible. And saying that, I was prompted to add that since everything ends badly for us in the inescapable catastrophe of death, it ~eems obvious that the first rule of life is to have a good time. The second rule of life is to injure as few people as possible in the course of doing so. There is no third rule. Well, my Puritan friends were highly disapproving of this pagan formulation of mine. But I see no reason, year after year, to alter it. Life is a fine thing and well worth the living. But the terms in which one lives it and the means one employs in the course of achieving one's good times are subject, of course, to constant sc:rutiny. For pagans, like Puritans, have standards of excellence, though they are by no means the same standards. It was Whitman, greatest of our poets, who sought to point the way for us. Whitman said, "0, to sing the most jubilant song," and for him that jubilation was earned out of a life of largely secret anguish, both in respect to his family and to himself. And it was Emer­ son, Whitman's mentor and champion, who said, "Give all to love, when the half-gods go, the gods arrive." Not that Emerson was all that ready to follow his own precept. Concord in the nineteenth century was just as leery of happiness as Hartford used to be. If you felt happy, something awful was probably just about to happen. Well, it is not so. If you feel happy, you will almost certainly provide the occasion for happiness in others. Happiness is a benign infection, and in an ideal soci­ OBSERVING GILL'S REMARKS, a graduate celebrates ety might well reach epidemic proportions. Alas, we the moment. Meanwhile, and without the least trace of shame, Happiness is a benign infection, continue wherever possible to take ruthless advantage and in an ideal society might well of your parents and other relatives. You must never let them forget that they brought you into the world reach epidemic proportions. without consulting you. And that their obligation to you can, therefore, never be discharged. Take as a model Bernard Shaw, sitting at ease in of living a good life it knows nothing. It cares every­ The British Museum in his late thirties while his poor thing for our price and nothing for our value. It old mother went on giving voice lessons to help keep usurps and exhausts our energies, and when we reach him alive. Shaw said later, "I didn't throw myself into out to seize the prize that we assume it offers us, there the struggle for life, I threw my mother in." is simply nothing there. Our greedy hands close upon Your parents ought to be able to take good care of emptiness. you well into your fifties and sixties. Insist upon secur­ I see no sign this age of hype is coming to an end. ing from them full financial disclosure. Make sure that On the contrary, we are ever increasingly a society of if they ever wish to go on a holiday, they ask your consumers, and what we consume strikes me as being permission to do so. Make sure also that they keep daily of less worth. The best we can do in our archi­ their hospital expenses to a minimum. Nothing is tecture is to build a Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in more distressing to right-thinking young folk than to New York, where in shiny brass and voluptuous pink see their parents and grandparents lolling about in marble, the message incessantly repeats itself, "buy, hospitals when they ought to be hard at work . buy, buy." . Have I any further words of advice to impart to you In what was once a school of higher education in with the authority that my cap and gown appears to New York, a course is now taught in window box grant to me? Well, perhaps two, the first of which gardening. How to grow dill and rosemary, to say comes from a wonderful early friend of mine, Mrs. 16 nothing, I suppose, of marijuana, on your window sill. Frederick Lewis Allen, who told me once that her What on earth is all this nonsense about? father had taken her aside and said that while he The one sure thing is that it has nothing to do with could leave no wealth to her, he could give her words what is on earth, and of the earth, and in the earth, of advice that would be worth more to her than any nothing to do with how we are as sentient beings, amount of gold or silver. capable of touching each other and being touched. The first was that she was never to sit down at a Everything is so much easier, and gentler and more cocktail party, and the second was that she was never agreeable than the age of hype is prepared to let us to put her tongue on the runner of a cold sled. Armed believe. with this advice, Mrs. Allen sailed untroubled Once upon a time, Madame de Stael, in her villa through life. Lac Leman, was giving a party, and she took her latest Finally - and is there a more beautiful word in the young man around the salon, introducing him to the English language than "finally," unless of course, it be distinguished guests present. Afterward, one of these those two words, "in conclusion?"- And so finally, guests protested that the young man had little in the and in conclusion, I give you a few words of Yeats, the way of small talk. "Ah," said Madame de Stael, poet by whom I have always lived and by whom I "speech is not his language." intend to die. In age, Yeats wrote of the preciousness And so it is with all of us. There are many kinds of of life, of its richness and savor, and said that he language, and speech has little to do with most of would be prepared to live it all again, even if life were them. You have come this far to this time and to this to prove to have no more meaning than blind men place by dint of nearly always obeying rules and battering other blind men in a ditch. To lead a wor­ nearly always following the leader. But this occasion is thy life, Yeats said, we must learn to accept it all, indeed a commencement, far more a beginning than rejoice in it all, without regret or remorse, because, he an end. And what could begin for you here is an end said, "When such as I cast out remorse/So great a to merely obeying rules and following leaders. I am sweetness flows into the breast/ We must laugh and we aware that this is a challenge not readily accessible to must sing,/We are blest by everything/Everything we all of you who are going on to schools of law and look upon is blest." medicine and the like. But surely there are a goodly And this is what old Dr. Gill- no, new Dr. Gill, if number of you for whom a diploma isn't really a pass­ not young Dr. Gill - wishes for you on the luckiest of port to still another educational destination, but a days for him. Thank you very much. • statement of achievement that you are now blessedly free to set your own course in the world. Which I Brendan Gill is the drama critic for The New Yorker. He was awarded a hope means doing battle with the false gods that beset Doctor of Letters Degree from Trinity College. you on every hand. Reunion Revisited

MEMBERS OF the Fiftieth Reunion Class gather for a photo before the Clambake on the Quad.

17 18

nion under the "new" spring format, revived by Alum­ Friday, a full schedule of lectures and seminars by fac­ ni Director Jerry Hansen in 1981. Judging by com­ ulty began; this aspect of Reunion continues to gener­ ments from the participants, there can be no doubt ate great alumni enthusiasm and participation. Some that Spring Reunion is a success. Alumni like the var­ of the topics offered this year were: "Heroes and Vil­ ied activities, the chance to stay on campus, and the lains in the World of Sports," "The Art of Adultery in family orientation of the program. Spouses and chil­ Indian Painting," "Congress and Special Interests," dren seem to have just as good a time at Trinity Reun­ and "The Bishops, the Bible, and the Bomb." ion as the graduates do. There was plenty of music for the ears, highlighted The festivities started on Thursday and culminated by a fabulous Broadway musical revue directed by Dr. in the Half-Century Club Dinner, where 24 members Gerald Moshell and performed by students, and a jazz of the Class of 1934 were inducted into the club. On concert by Charlie Weeks' ('59) "Hornblowers." And PREPARATIONS for the Clambake (left); a young Reunion participant picks up tennis pointers; and (below), choreographed musical revue by students was memorable entertainment.

19 AWARDS

EIGENBRODT CUP AWARD Thomas Deal Reese, Jr. Class of 1961

Fifteen years ago Trinity honored this alumnus · with an Achievement in Life Award in recognition of his gallant combat record with the U.S. Marine Corps. Regrettably, this life that was so full of promise was taken from us in a tragic accident last December. In the span of his brief but shining 44 years, however, he exemplified the qualities that make not only a su­ perb Marine, but also an exceptional human being. His leadership qualities were evident in his under­ graduate years when he was captain of the freshman and varsity football teams, president of the sopho­ more dining club, senior warden of the Chapel vestry, EIGENBRODT A WARD is accepted by Mrs. Thomas a member of the student senate, co-chairman of the D. Reese. Canterbury Club and vice president of Alpha Delta Phi. named director of the Office of Strategic Analysis in Commissioned in the Marines following graduation charge of economic forecasting. Shortly before his he served in the Corps for nine years, seeing combat death he left the Postal Service to become a vice presi­ service in the Dominican Republic and as a company dent of Ziehl Associates, a New York telecommunica­ commander in VietNam for which he was awarded tions firm. the Silver Star and three Purple Hearts. In keeping His devotion to Trinity was legendary: it is said that with his unselfish character, he was wounded while hardly a day went by that he did not find time to 20 braving enemy fire to rescue a fallen member of his telephone one of his classmates. His loyal service as a rifle company. class agent inspired his countless Trinity friends to After an extended recuperation he left the Marine achieve record levels of support for their alma mater. Corps in 1970 to become a Congressional Liaison Of­ The Trinity Club of Washington, D.C. remembers ficer in the Postmaster General's Office, while simul­ him as one of its most active and dedicated members. taneously earning an M.B.A. degree from George Mr. President, it is with pride that we salute one of Washington University. He rose rapidly through the Trinity's most beloved sons by naming him posthu­ administrative ranks of the Postal Service, serving as mously for the highest award that can be given an special assistant to several top ranking agency officials alumnus. The Eigenbrodt Cup is given to THOMAS including the Post Master General. In 1981 he was DEAL REESE, JR. Class of 1961.

there was plenty of fine food for the palate at the New The Annual Reunion Class Parade seems to gain England Clambake Friday under class tents on the more momentum each year, with the senior classes quad, and at Class Dinners Saturday at various loca­ glad to see the old tradition back in style, and with tions on campus. The newly-expanded Mather Cam­ the younger alums ready and willing to get in line. pus Center, particularly the air conditioned Cave-Pub Afterwards, the National Alumni Association recog­ facility, provided bright, new facilities for the nized some of its most outstanding members. In addi­ weekend. tion to those pictured here, awards were given t,o the The sports program came off surprisingly well, given following: The George C. Capen Trophy went to the the heat. Younger alumni in particular got into the Trinity Club of Hartford as best alumni club, and the annual softball game, which was moved from the soft­ Jerome Kohn Award for highest percentage of class­ ball diamond to the shadier quad. One of the most mates returning to Reunion was won by the Class of 1934. The 1916 Alumni Fund Trophy went to the popular spots on campus all weekend was Trow bridge pool, and the posted hours were extended to give alum­ Class of 197 3 for the best fundraising record among ni a better chance to get down to Ferris to cool off. the younger classes, while the Class of 1934 Trophy for the best Alumni Fund record among all the classes Children of all ages were on hand for Reunion. Pre­ was awarded to the Class of 1960. T wo members of schoolers were cared for in a nursery .in Funston the 25th Reunion Class were recognized as the first Dorm, while older children were kept busy with the registrants for Reunion: reservations by Peter Hen­ All-Sports Camp, movies, cookouts and a day trip to riques and Arthur Judge '59 were received at the Col­ Mystic Aquarium. lege March 7. AWARDS

ALUMNI MEDALS FOR EXCELLENCE

JOHN C. GUNNING '49 ALFRED M. C. MACCOLL '54 MARY ]0 MATEL KEATING '74 "A Hartford native, this alumnus "A man for all the seasons might "In the decade since her gradua­ has spent the better part of his life be the most appropriate description tion, this creative alumna has made improving the fortunes and fea­ of this alumnus, who by virtue of her mark in the fast-paced field of tures of his hometown. Now cele­ his consuming interest and involve­ corporate and financial communi­ 21 brating his thirty-fifth reunion, he ment in Trinity athletics has earned cations. Her meteoric career as a has capped three decades in the real the title of Number One Bantam business communicator has in­ estate profession by becoming pres­ Sports Fan." cluded demanding interpretive as­ ident of Dow and Condon, one of signments for some of the nation's the city's most prestigious firms." leading corporations."

ALUMNI MEDAL FOR ACHIEVEMENT

WILLIAM K. MARIMOW '69 "Out of those tumultuous and iconoclastic times of the late sixties came a generation schooled in the art of asking hard questions. No one has practiced the questioner's art more skillfully than this alum­ nus who, less than ten years after graduation, won journalism's high­ est honor, the Pulitzer Prize." AWARDS

AL DEXTER '36 accepts for his class the Alumni - Association Award for most improved participation in the Alumni Fund (left); Dave Kennedy '54 of Honolulu (above) came the farthest distance for Reunion.

22

BOARD OF FELLOWS - Bowl for the best reunion class spirit was awarded to the Class of 1934. SIXTEENERS (above) at Half-Century Dinner; Howard Griffith '54 (right) checks out Computer Center.

23

TOM CHOLNOKY was standard bearer for the Class of 1979.

CLASS OF 1959 shows the colors at the Parade (above); members of Class of 1939 (below) socialize on the Quad before the Clambake. "' ' ' ~ .• .., • l! ""' . ~ • An imaginative·pldn to perpettt~ate our nati6h:al inheritance. • I \ .. I - GREAT PREDATORS, such as these Siberian tigers at the Bronx Zoo, require large populations of prey animals.

orne clever person once said that the world is the lengths some people are going to in order to pre­ S divided into two kinds of people - those who serve animals in extreme danger of extinction. divide the world into two kinds of people The story is heartening, yet basically sad. It re­ and those who don't. You will know which quires understanding. It is about a new kind of group I belong to if I suggest that the world may conservation and is based upon the special interest be divided into those who care and those who don't. of Mr. Enders in wildlife propagation. · Obviously, Ostrom Enders cares about wildlife and his If you have never danced with a crane, shuffled with magnificent and very personal recent gift of ornithol­ a tiger or helped a condor out of its egg shell, you may ogical books to the Trinity College Library is based have an idealized view of wild creatures and wilder­ upon the perception that, ultimately, caring is founded ness characterized by untouchable noble beasts - or · · upon understanding. But understanding is not always even a dispassionate one of inexorable statistics and mutual. neat mathematical models. However, if you can admit One of the favorite stories of the great ornithologist, to what Donald Griffin of the Rockefeller University Sir Peter Scott, is about understanding. It concerns a calls, an "evolutionary continuity of mental experi­ palaeontologist who had paved his patio with casts of ence" in all living creatures, and would be willing to dinosaur footprints. One day, as he showed-off the take to the water after the fashion of a Konrad Lorenz patio to a visiting garden club, identifying each of the to help goslings learn to swim, you are predisposed to footprints - brontosaurus, stegosaurus, triceratops, understand what follows. and so forth - one lady hung back from the rest, At present rates of human exploitation, most of the clearly troubled. Finally, she said to her host, "What Earth's major ecosystems will be fragmented during surprises me' is that they would come so close to the the next twenty-five years. Much of its most beautiful house." and inspiring wildlife will be lost, to say With this for an introduction, I want to tell you of nothing of its resilience against further .-,llllllll-. damage. This certainty is beginning to stimulate an species in their original habitats. Preserving cranes, extraordinarily diverse, often bizarre, effort to pre­ tigers and condors with artificial help and breeding serve vanishing animals through intensive manipula­ them in captivity, is only a last resort. But, for more tion of their behavior, even their ecology, by captive and more wild creatures, adequate habitat is disap­ propagation. Such programs are not treating with the pearing. ultimate causation of wildlife endangerment; they are Last year, for example, the government of Mauritius dealing with the symptoms - the loss of a species. Yet invited the New York Zoological Society to participate the act of preserving a species can be a powerful strat­ in a program to save the endangered Mauritius pi­ egy in moving a particular populace to reconsider en­ geon. Less than a dozen birds remain in nature, they vironmental destruction. And it would be helpful to wrote, and the species now survives as a result of a have some wild animals still if some of the ultimate painstaking propagation program. There are no longer problems are solved. adequate forests in nature. They sent us eight birds. "Nature should be allowed to take its course," cry On January 26, 1983 the first American pink pigeon many who decry the care of wildlife through manage­ pushed out of his shell at the Bronx Zoo's World of ment or captive propagation. Few debate this view Birds. where natural and complete ecosystems remain. We were also invited to join in a capture and breed­ Where they do not, other conservationists point out ing attempt for the Mauritius parakeet, still living in that it is simply unrealistic. Regrettably, such conflicts nature but down to four or five birds. The proposed seriously hinder efforts to propagate vanishing ani­ capture was a desperate last gamble which we sadly mals and retard other supportive projects essential to declined. their survival. When I observe well-meaning conservationists fail­ Big nature reserves and many more of them are ing to communicate among themselves about what to needed but even the best seem destined to become do for vanishing species, I am reminded of the un­ islands of wildlife in a sea of humanity. The great pre­ happy experience of a friend in the back country of dators, chiefly the big cats, pose a special problem. Arkansas. Driving on a dangerously muddy one-lane Tigers and leopards do not make good neighbors for road, he spied a lady motoring toward him and cour­ human beings and, as top predators, they can only be teously pulled into a ditch to let her pass. As she went supported by large populations of prey animals. by, she rewarded him by shouting, at the top of her Thomas Henry Huxley once made the unpersuasive lungs, "Pig." Justifiably annoyed, he maneuvered out observation that, "a tiger has a natural right to eat a 25 of the ditch, angrily roared around the corner ... and man; but if he may eat one man, he may eat another hit a pig. Failures in communication are all too com­ so that a tiger has a right of property in all men, as mon in conservation too. potential tiger meat." Clearly, only a little of nature has any prospect of I worry particularly about the fate of species which remaining undisturbed. A great dying of wild animals have no close relatives, animals greatly different from and plants is now taking place. They are going extinct others - whether they are attractive or not. The giant as fast as one species each day. Mostly, they are panda, the Indian gharial, the hairy rhino, are exam­ smaller creatures - many not yet known even to sci­ ples. entists. But at least 1,000 species of mammals and There is no reason to believe that much unmanaged birds are also endangered. wilderness will remain when the children of this year's This sorry situation has been brought on by ex­ graduating class are old. Small parks, where large, pro­ panding human populations and consequent habitat lific animals dwell, will become "mega-zoos" and have destruction, by pollution and poaching, but primarily to be cared for almost as intensively. Even large re­ by alterations of the land at a rate faster than at any serves will have marginal or unsuccessful populations time in the recent history of living things. It leaves particular animals.All this means that the sur­ no time and no space for the slow pace of vival of some may depend not only upon new evolution and replacement by new understanding but even upon "reseeding" from forms; the basis of the continuation of life. captive "gene banks." For this reason, government The first task of wildlife conservation is to save wildlife departments and zoos find themselves being called upon to establish captive reservoirs of liv­ ing species which have lost their homes in nature or which cannot, for the present, be adequately guarded. It is against this background, and the spur applied by man's inevitably tardy conviction that it is much worse to lose the last animal in a population than 'the first, that a series of intensively manipulative captive propagation efforts have been launched to preserve refugees from despoiled habitats. Rather than speak in the abstract, I will tell you several short stories; each with enormous immediacy: As we sit here tonight, on the equator at the Dar­ win Station in the Galapagos Islands, a scientist feeds hatchling giant tortoises. At the Bronx Zoo in New York, zoologists stand by to aid a pregnant Mongolian wild horse should a delivery be difficult. The species became extinct in nature about 1966. In the Bialow­ ieza Forest in Poland, a truck driver deposits hay for a herd of hulking European bison. The last wild Euro­ pean bison was eaten by Poli~h peasants in 1921. Each of these activities bespeaks a dedication to the contin­ ued survival of a wild creature which, because of man, is no longer able to survive without man and each is representative of a growing new concept of responsi­ 26 bility toward wildlife - of care; a new relationship between man and wild animal. Now think about cheetahs. Hardly any cheetahs ANDEAN CONDOR chick was artificially incubated and had been bred in captivity before 1965. But during the hand-raised at the zoo, then released in Peru. past few years, two hundred or more have been reared. The key was found at DeWildt, the cheetah male into the female's enclosure, and keep watch for a breeding station of the National Zoo of South Africa while to be sure that nothing untoward happens. where the speedy cats have become almost too pro­ After a two- or three-day honeymoon, the male is lific. Female cheetahs of breeding age need to feel se­ moved out. In 1975, only seven cubs were weaned but cure, to be housed separately from other females as by 1979, 21 or more were being reared each year. well as males. And, they prefer not only a choice of Experience is not enough for Ann van Dyk's task. It male partners but also to choose the time to consort takes exquisite sensitivity. Such animal-by-animal un­ with them - as in the wild. The South Africans derstanding is one difference between the close-up car­ solved this problem by covering a hillside, with half­ ing of the new captive conservation programs and hectare fenced "camps" all inter-connected by a conventional efforts. Ann van Dyk has little patience fenced road. Each female cheetah was given her own with the "rather dead than bred" attitude of those home, separate from all other cheetahs and out of who would watch man push a species into extinction sight and sound of the males which were housed in rather than sustain it. She states her belief simply, groups of six or eight on the other side of the hill. "There is a need not only for people to care but to In 1977, Ann van Dyk, the manager of De Wildt, commit themselves to provide care." took me along the inter-connecting path which she A different idea of care for cats was offered in the uses as a service passage to deliver food to her chee­ January LIFE magazine by Mrs. Oramie Lewis of Bed­ tahs. From time to time, she explained, she would ford, Ohio. Mrs. Lewis's domestic cat, Felix, was run ~hoose a group of males and entice them into follow­ over by a car. Felix was freeze-dried on the advice of ing her food-laden truck through the passageway. her veterinarian, Dr. Marshall Pettibone, who said, Then, she would watch. The presence of the males "There's no sense in getting a new cat every ten years usually brought each female to the end of her "camp" or so when you can have the same one for 50 or 60 closest to Mrs. van Dyk's entourage. The males were years." Mrs. Lew_is reported, "He's just like he was in usually interested in the females and a receptive fe­ real life, except he's a little flatter in the middle." male would leave no doubt about her interest in the If ever an animal needed care, it is the golden lion males. Then comes the tricky part. Mrs. van Dyk has tamarin, a tiny primate with a shining gilt-colored to pick a male - she knows each by sight - and coat, now restricted to two patches of forest in the maneuver the rejected suitors away, let the chosen low-lying coastal region of Brazil's state of Rio deJa- neiro. Once, trapping for export was a part of its prob­ tures. If a desperately endangered species is not lem but unchecked habitat destruction seems to have reproducing fast enough to survive, what can be sealed its fate. The tamarin's total population in done? If a particular male or female is unwilling or is na74re does not exceed 75. Its only real refuge, a unable to breed; if there are too few animals of one 5,000-hectare reserve, is fragmented by roads and family line, or too many of one sex; if there is a fear other developments. Now, a dam will flood about 25 that the species may lose wild features through genera­ percent of it. Even here, poaching is constant and tions of captive breeding- is there any hope? Thanks protection ephemeral. A few years ago, the golden ta­ to advances in reproductive science, worked out with marin's prospects in captivity were not better than in domestic animals and man, sometimes the answer is nature, but that has changed. Today, there are nearly "yes." 350 in captivity, almost 90 percent of them in the U.S. Artificial insemination is one well-known tool. Six­ and the population is growing nearly 25 percent each teen wild mammals ranging from gorilla and giant year. Now, the stage is set for an attempt at reintrod­ panda to Speke's gazelle and the Persian leopard have uction into the wild and studies are underway to de­ all produced young by artificial insemination. Among termine if the location tentatively selected by the birds, a variety of species, from peregrine falcons and Brazilians will be suitable and truly protected. whooping cranes to ocellated turkeys have been prop­ On May 23, 1963, four Arabian oryx were off­ agated by "A.I." loaded in New York on their way to the Phoenix Zoo Fortunately, the sperm of many animals can be fro­ in Arizona. Three of them, "Edith," "Pat," and "To­ zen and stored for years before use. In domestic cattle matum," were the first critically endangered animals breeding, some of the most popular sires have been ever deliberately captured and shipped to another dead for years, but their sperm is still producing country, not for exhibition, but as the nucleus of a calves. Where sperm can be stored, fhe genes of a rare breeding herd for the survival of their species. They family line can be preserved without change. In effect, were accompanied by "Caroline" from the London Zoo and their story is extraordinary. 27 Formerly, the Arabian oryx was plentiful through­ out much of the Arabian peninsula. Gradually, how­ ever, as firearms became more available, the long­ horned antelopes were reduced to a few remnant pop­ ulations in the south of their range. Then, early in 1961, a motorized party of Arabs from Qatar, 500 miles to the north, killed at least 48, about half of the remaining population. England's Fauna Preservation Society with the International Union for the Conser­ vation of Nature decided to act. However, even as they were preparing an expedition, to be led by Major Ian Grimwood, there was a second raid by hunters - said to have killed tQ.e rest of the oryx. Undaunted, Grimwood set off anyway and he did find a few oryx. To the three animals he brought back from his May 1962 expedition, and London's Caro­ line, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia donated five more from small private collections to form a "World Herd." The progeny of these nine animals, plus a few more which went to the Los Angeles Zoo, raised 36 fawns in 1982 and the captive population was ap­ proaching 200. U.S. bred oryx have now been sent to collections in Jordan, Qatar, Morocco, and the Hai Bar Reserve in Israel. Most exciting, is a reintroduc­ tion attempt in nature, in Oman. Here, under the constant surveillance of Harasis guards, whose coun­ trymen might have once sought to kill them, Arabian oryx are being carefully reintroduced to their former home. They return not as quarry but as a national treasure. Despite increasing sophistication in animal care, im­ SNOW LEOPARD, shown with cubs at the Bronx Zoo, has provements may come too slowly for some rare crea- been preserved by artificial insemination techniques. 28

NATIONAL BISON HERD was established in 1907 at a site in Oklahoma using stock from a captive herd in the Bronx Zoo. Here, Zoo Director William Hornaday is shown with the first bison to be shipped to the western reserves.

a part of an animal's population might be kept "on the hormones, there are as many as six. They are ice" rather than taking up limited room in zoos, or separated, evaluated, and finally transferred, one even under-sized nature reserves. All the zoos in the each, into the waiting surrogate mothers. world would fit within the borough of Brooklyn. More than 20,000 domestic calves were produced Today, there is an even more exciting reproduction in the United States using this technique last year, technique now producing spectacular results with none having any relationship to the mothers which some domestic mammals, including man. It is the bore them. Acceleration of the population growth of transfer of whole embryos, not only from one animal a very rare species is one advantage of embryo trans­ to another but even from one species-to another. fer. The genetic mother of Flossie's calf went on to In 198 1 at the Bronx Zoo, Flossie, a black-and-white bear another not long after Flossie gave birth. But holstein dairy cow, gave birth to a gaur, a rare species the potentials of embryo transfer go further. A spe­ of huge Asiatic wild cattle. The calf was the result of cial excitement in zoological circles surrounding such an embryo transfer from a vanishing species to a do­ transfers lies in the concept of a "frozen zoo." mestic surrogate, the first of its kind and completely Cattle embryos can be kept frozen, yet viable, for unrelated to Flossie. The potentials of endangered spe­ years. Preservation for hundreds of years is conceiv­ cies embryo transfer and storage by freezing stagger able. It may be that a "frozen zoo" could preserve the imagination. animals geneticall y unchanged almost indefinitely. Since 1965, cattle breeders have increasingly used For tiny refuge or zoo populations, such a species embryo transfer to boost production of calves from "bank" would offer a new security from the possibili­ prized stock. Hormones are administered to a particu­ ties of catastrophic disease or accident. But for most larly desirable cow to stimulate her to produce more mammals, such potentials are far from realization than the usual one egg each estrous cycle. Then the and neither bird embryo transfer nor embryo preser­ cow is inseminated. In the meantime surrogate cows of vation is yet practical. However, in birds, artificial lesser genetic value have their cycles synchronized incubation of eggs and the techniques of inducing with that of the original female. birds to lay more eggs than normal is becoming com­ Next, the fertilized eggs - six to eight day old em­ mon. The breeding success of Miss MacNasty, an bryos - are washed from the uterus of the original Andean condor which lived at the Bronx Zoo, pro­ cow. Usually, because of superovulation caused by vides an important example. At this moment, in Peru, three thousand miles tion of an option for the future. Beyond restoration South of us, so high on the wind as to be no more itself, reintroduction may add one more rallying than wheeling specks against the peaks of the Andes, point for those struggling to develop conservation at­ soar three Andean condors, bred in the Bronx. I titudes and preserve habitats in young countries. held each in my hand when ix began life as a fist­ There is a compelling illustration from the history of sized white egg deposited by zoo parents. Each was my own institution, the New York Zoological Soci­ artificially incubated and reared at the zoo. The An­ ety, with the American bison. dean condor, like its nearly extinct cousin, the Cali­ It took place at the turn of the century, when the fornia condor, normally lays but one egg every other praire bison was at its lowest ebb. The "buffalo" was year. By removing Miss MacNasty's eggs (she was reduced from 60 million in this country to perhaps mated to Angel from the Los Angeles Zoo) as soon 20 animals in Yellowstone National Park and to ani­ as she laid them, we induced her to lay more. This mals in captive herds at ranches and zoos. Following response was a natural one, used to replace broken several years of effort, in Oklahoma and in Washing­ eggs in nature. Instead of producing only two young ton, D.C. with Congress, the Zoological Society fi­ in four years, she produced eight. And, some of these nally received permission to ship bison west from the youngsters are the wheeling specks now soaring over Bronx Zoo's herd. Their destination was to be the the Peruvian Andes. The potential for increasing the newly created Wichita National Wildlife Preserve in population of the desperately endangered California Oklahoma and later Montana and South Dakota, to condor with the same technique is clear - if it is not begin the process of restocking the denuded bison too late. ranges of the West. Cross-fostering is yet another technique in use with In the Fall of 1907, Frank Rush, who was to man­ rare birds - and the technique of egg or chick trans­ age the new preserve, came to the Bronx to get the fer is analogous to embryo transfer in mammals. bison. Years later, Mr. Rush's widow related the Captive-bred chicks of bald eagles and peregrine fal­ story of their arrival in Oklahoma. cons are being placed in the nests of barren eagles It had been a sensation. Indians flocked to see the and falcons. (These birds are barren as a result of buffalo return to their old home. The squaws were 29 pesticide ingestion in nature.) Scores of peregrine dressed in their brightest. Some had been waiting for chicks are being successfully fostered by prairie fal­ days in their rickety wooden wagons and with their cons in many parts of the West. Already birds reared multi-colored ponies. As the animals arrived, old this way are breeding in the wild. Often, human fos­ men peered into the fifteen Bronx Zoo boxes and ter parents are part of the mix. told excited young boys about the hunting of the M y friend, Stanley Temple, won acceptance as a bison in their youth. mate by an artificially inseminated, female, golden The first national bison herd had been established eagle at a Cornell University laboratory. When Tem­ and the buffalo had returned to at least a portion of ple 's eagle began incubation of her eggs, he had to the range of the great southern herds. After a fund­ leave class regularly, rush across campus to the cage raising program to support further reintroductions, and stand his turn at incubation duty with a hot the Zoo sent bison to other preserves and successfully water bottle. Only upon his appearance would his pressed for more refuges. faithful mate leave her nest to feed and preen. There still exists in the Zoo's archives a pencilled In 1983, the Peregrine Fund, founded by Tom letter on lined paper in the shaky hand of old age: Cade of Cornell University, produced more than 200 young peregrines in its various laboratories and most "Enclosed I send two dollars for the Montana Na­ of these birds were released either through fostering tional bison herd. I have seen the great herds with at wild bird nests or by human fostering ("hacking"). countless thousands of the noble animals in them, Spectacular nestings of previously released birds took and would be sorry to know that a time had come place on New York City's Verrazano Narrows and when none were left in the United States. Bronx-Whitestone bridges last summer. Once again, Respectfully, peregrines can be seen on the wing, from California Mrs. U.L. Parker Union, Iowa" to New York. In any one instance a proposal to reintroduce cap­ Mrs. Parker's two dollars was well spent, on a new tive-bred wild creatures to nature, Arabian oryx in Oman or golden lion tamarins in Brazil, may or may kind of conservation. • not be practical. With the steady diminution of wild­ lands presently taking place all over the earth, rein­ Author William Conway is general director of the New York Zoological troduction opportunities will be rare. Besides, Society and a pioneer in the specialty of zoo biology. This article is adapted "nature" wi ll no longer be as it was. Vegetation may from a talk he gave on campus this spring in honor of Ostrom Enders on the occasion of the presentation of the Enders Ornithological Library to be altered and predators or prey animals removed. the College. Conway was also honored during the ceremonies with an Nevertheless, a captive "gene pool" is the preserva- honorary Doctor of Science degree. 1983 .. 84 REVIEW~~~~~~ It was another very successful year on the field and in the arenas of New England for Trinity sports teams. The twenty-six varsity teams posted a 213-124-4 re­ cord for a winning percentage of .625. Sorry guys, but once again it was the women who carried most of the load. Nine of the eleven women's teams were winners for an overall mark of95-44-1, a .679 winning percent­ age. The men had nine winners out of fifteen teams for a 118-80-3 mark, a .587 winning percentage. Women's lacrosse won its second straight NIAC Championship while field hockey reached the finals and soccer reached the semi-finals. The tennis team was second in New England, the squash team was fourth in the nation and the swim team set a Trinity record of 18 wins in a row, going back to 1982-83. For the men, the basketball team won the ECAC Championship after reaching the finals two of the pre­ vious three years. The track team was an undefeated 9-0 and won the NESCAC crown. The squash team tied for third in the nation while ice hockey made the play-offs for the first time since 1979. JOE SHIELD (top) will zero in on New England passing Seven Bantams and Lady Bants were awarded All­ records this season. Jeanne Monnes, a talented goalkeeper, American Honors. In football, quarterback Joe Shield had five shut-outs for women's soccer in 1983. and defensive back-kick returner Nick Bordieri were honored. From the squash teams, Bill Doyle, Mike regaining the use of four key performers who studied Georgy, Nina Porter and Kat Castle all repeated as abroad in 1983 on the women's soccer team. All of All-Americans. Two swimmers gave encore All-Amer­ these teams h ave the realistic goal of New England ican performances: Dea Frederick and D eb C ronin. championships. T he men's soccer team under Robie Shults has almost everyone b ack and hopes to display FALL PREVIEW ~~~~~~ consistently the brand of play that appeared at times Perhaps it is the restful summer, or the inspirational last year. Both cross-country squads should be strong surroundings of colorful leaves on crisp autumn days, once again under coach John Kelly. but it seems the Bantam struts his stuff best in the fall. With the n ation's top-ranked Division III quarterback SUMMER SPORTS CAMPS ~~~ returning in Joe Shield, and a changed schedule, the The athletes may be younger, but the spirit is the football team could make Don Miller's eighteenth same in the summer in and around the Ferris Athletic year as head coach a memorable one. Co-Captain Center. Two sports camps for area youth made for a Shield is re-writing the Trinity record book with an constant state of activity as the Bantams of the 1990s air attack the San D iego C h argers would be proud of. learned the basic skills. Colby and Union are off the schedule with Bates and For the fifteenth consecutive year, inner-city Bowdoin back on it. U n ion h as been a particularly youngsters from underprivileged backgrounds came to tough opponent the last two years. Tim McNamara Trinity for the N ation al Youth Sports Program. T rin­ and Mike Doetsch will be the recipients of many ity Track Coach Jim Foster ran this federally-funded Shield aerials. camp for over 400 participants. Becky Chase's powerful women's tennis team re­ The Trinity College Sports C amp hosted over 100 turns virtually intact. They will find th at their clay boys and girls in each of three two-week sessions. courts are now asphalt . Although a fine group of sen­ Camp Director Stan O grodnik, T rinity's men's bas­ iors graduated from the fi eld hockey team, every year ketball coach, ran the operation which is in its sixth Robin Sheppard is able to find replacements from the year. The camp was visited by N BA star Rick Mahorn sophomore and freshman classes. Karen Erlandson is of the Washington Bullets.

RICHARD B. LANDER and Karen L. LYNN C. VEAZEY and Nathaniel J. Schmidt, March 31, 1984 Rockwell, May 12, 1984 KATHRIN POOLE and Howard H. Tom­ linson, June 9, 1984 1980- 1983 GEORGE ROBERTS and Andrea M. Wil­ EUGENE LEFEBVRE and MARJORIE 31 Class Notes liams, January 3, 1984 SHEFFIELD, April 28, 1984 1976 1981 NILS 0. TCHEYAN and Karen Peake, SUSAN L. GERACI and Scott W. Mar­ ENGAGEMENTS May, 1984 hefki, May 26, 1984 • W~DDINGS TRACY G. NEWMAN and William Ben­ 1963 1977 ham, July 29, 1984 W.L. LINDBERG and Karen M. Daniels SOPHIE BELL and Warren D. Ayres, Jr., JUDITH A. SEEBER and David P. Boyd, ~· June 16, 1984 May 6, 1984 1969 1944 JAMES R. DAVENPORT and Carol Ann AL JURCIK and Lally Gelpi RICHARD K. DANIELSON and Carol J . Grace, September 2, 1983 1981-1982 Hunt, April28, 1984 DEIRDRE O'BRIEN and Richard B. Phe­ DIANE LEE NAPERT and DAVID 1971 lan, May 19, 1984 JOHN HOWE, June 23, 1984 GARY ROSEN and Nancy Packard 1950 EDWARD RIVKIN and Stacey Beerman, PETER L. BAIN and SHARON E. SAUL, BENNETT TABER and Cathleen Ed- EVERETT W. BENNETT and Jo Ann June, 1984 June 2, 1984 wards Wright, February 10, 1984 MARY A. WERTHEIM and Daniel B. PHILIP J. PEDRO and LISA A. MOU­ Harris, May 28, 1984 GALIAN, July 14, 1984 1973 1960 JANICE MAJEWSKI and Richard J. FRANK JAGO and Shirley M. Estelle, 1978 1982 Delmar May 19, 1984 AMANDA T. BROWN and Burton J. Me­ DENISE M. KEZERIAN and John J. Pit­ gargel, May 20, 1984 kin, May 26, 1984 1976 1962 HOWARD M. CROPSEY and Heather D. CATHERINE E . KLEINSCHMIDT and DAVID F. MERIWETHER, M.D. and PETE REINTHALER and Audi Thomas, Howson, June 15, 1984 Dr. Nick Gura, May 20, 1984 Karyn Ann Johnston March 4, 1984 J .R. DOLDORIAN, JR. and Pamela J. MEREDITH A. LOUNSBURY and Gary Leavens, August 20, 1983 G. Despins, June 16, 1984 1977 1965 GAIL C. DOYLE and Pierre J. RattE{, June DEBRA MANDELA and Jeffrey A. Mey­ PETER B. VAN SYCKLE and Janet JON D. SIMONIAN and Charlene Antar­ 2, 1984 ers, May 12, 1984 Richards amian, March 2, 1984 CAROL TAYLOR and Garth Easton, April MATTHEW McLAUGHLIN and Lucy 7, 1984 DiTaranto, June 30, 1984 1979- 1981 1968 BARBARA L. WOLF and Steven C. Ja­ JOHN A. MEANEY and Rosemary S. T.W. JOHNSON and LAURA LAUGH­ DONALD A. BARLOW and Joanne Mar­ blow, July 8, 1984 Browne, June 28, 1984 LIN ino, April 3, 1984 1979 PALMER H. SLOAN and Finley T. JOHN R. THIBODEAU and Noreen M. VIVIAN P. APT and D. Jeffrey Disbrow, Harckham, June 30, 1984 1980 Keenan, July, 1984 June 16, 1984 SUZANNE HERR and JAY OLSON AMY D. KATZ and Bradley A. Bilgore, 1983 1973 May 5, 1984 DANIEL TAITZ and Penny Nemzer, Au­ 1982 KENT E. HOWARD and Jane Ann Testa, CORNELIA McLANE and William W. gust 12, 1984 KEITH McATEER and Sheila Davidson July 20, 1984 Burchfield, June 2, 1984 MARY ELLEN MAHONEY and Scott WILLIAM W. PARISH, JR. and Carol R. CHARLOTTE MILLER and Michael J. 1984 Hickes Brill. February 26, 1984 McCarthy, May 12, 1984 ROBBIN B. A. HENRY and Lenworth A. SUSAN L. RESONY and David M. Loomis SIDNEY A. ROWELL and Denise Kon­ Gordon, June 30, 1984 CAROL RUMERY and William Carr 1974 ner, August 19, 1984 ANNE BONNIWELL and David J. Gale, Masters May 12, 1984 1980 Masters JOSHUA FEINGOLD and Denise B. 1982 1975 Jaffe, June 10, 1984 1978 .J ENNIFER A. ZELIFF and R. Timothy DOUGLAS W. CLARK and Gale Sunder­ JEFFREY V. SWAIN and Mary Early, CAROLE A. STASIOWSKI and Frank J . Kearney land, June 23, 1984 April 9, 1984 Adinolfi, Jr., June 15, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Sooley, daugh· 1982 entire football schedule. Can only think of ter, Veronica Hueber, September 30, Lt. j.g. and Mrs. Paul E. Hansen (Theresa a couple games I have missed in over fifty 1983 Ferrero), daughter, Laura Ruth, April years. Expect MEL TITLE will be at the 1973 4, 1984 home games. Mr. and Mrs. Jay N. Jorgenson, (Ara Lynn Mr. and Mrs. David I. Brown (Diane Didn't make the Fifty Year Dinner this Fierri), daughter, Pamela Anne, No· Meyer) son, Richard Nels, December 30, year for reasons explained above. BIRTHS 1983 vember 12, 1983 Class Agent: Louisa Pinney Barber Mr. and Mrs. A. Jerome Connolly, son, Andrew Scott, October 31, 1983 Mr. and Mrs. Coutrakon (Joanne Wil· Masters Iiams) son, Philip Hatton, April29, 1983 Clinton Brill Mr. and Mrs. Edward Huntley (Nancy Pe· 1981 Route 13, Box 227 rugini), son, Jonathan Edward, May 28, Mr. and Mrs. George E. Blair son, 19 Tallahassee, FL 32312 1957 III, 1983 George Edward IV, September l, 1983 Mr. and Mrs. Mw·ray A. Varat, daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm A. Kirkland, son, The Fellowship of Connecticut Congre· Jessica, January 26, 1984 Alexander Deming, February 11, 1983 1982 gational Christian Churches honored Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Pistell, daugh· · Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Riemer (Janice C.), HENRY VALENTINE of West Hartford 1960 ter, Julia, June 28, 1983 son, William Edward, April 1, 1984 at its last "autumn gathering" at Center· Mr. and Mrs. Barry G. Royden, daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Read, daughter, brook Congregational in Essex. Henry, a Michelle Ann, March 14, 1984 Sarah Parker, July 22, 1983 member of South Congregational Church Robert E . Cross in Hartford, was executive director of the 1961 1974 208 Newbury St. fellowship - which is composed of inde· Mr. and Mrs. Rostyslaw Sobol, son, Mar· Mr. and Mrs. Peter Basch, daughter, 14 Hartford, CT 06114 pendent Congregational churches - for kian Roman, March 26, 1984 Emma Gabrielle, March 17, 1984 many years. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Lawson, son, From TED HUDSON comes the happy VINCENT POTTER writes that he has 1964 William Stanley, March 12, 1984 news that he is "94 - still going strong!" "just returned from a complete tour of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Ratches, son, Na· Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spinelli (Nancy Class Agent: Edwin M. Barton England and Scotland by motor car. Re· thaniel Edberg, September 21, 1983 Bruckner), son, Eric Michael, April 3, cent trips include one to Mexico and Can· Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ehrhardt, daugh· 1984 ada." ter, Nathalie Christine, February 17, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Ziccardi, twin son 1984 and daughter, Andrew and Emily, Oc· Erhardt G. Schmitt tober 7, 1983 41 Mill Rock Rd. 1967 16 New Haven, CT 06511 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Fox, daughter, 1975 James A. Calano Brenna Rose, April 16, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Carr (Victoria Baker), son, Your SCRIBE was most fortunate to at· 35 White St. Mr. and Mrs. James L. O'Connor, son, Daniel Forrest, December 5, 1983 tend the Half-Century Reunion 1984. My 23 Hartford, CT 06114 Edward William, April 6, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Cheatham (Cheryl Smith), youngest son, PETER '60, very kindly son, Brett Rory, March 25, 1984 drove over from Syracuse and escorted me IKE NEWELL is an inventive genius as 1968 Mr. and Mrs. Clarkson Addis III, daugh· most thoughtfully to and from the meet· well as a renowned chemical and industrial Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. George, Jr., son ter, Caroline Elizabeth. July 3, 1983 ing. Back to New Haven, whole and in one engineer. I recently inveigled from Ike a Jacob, October 21, 1983 Mr. and Mrs. Morgan (Rebecca Stein), piece, and reasonably sober. A splendid ac· list of his patents which follows: deicing Mr. and Mrs. Mark Loether, son, Jona· daughter, Eliza Rivkah, February 28, complishment indeed! composition for aircraft parts and sur· than Blake, March 9, 1983 1984 Sad to say, there were only two 1916ers; faces, process for blackening copper and Mr. and Mrs. Cruger Johnson Phillips, namely, SAM BERKMAN and his wife and copper alloys, method of rectifying halide 1969 daughter, Emily Elizabeth Schuyler, "DUTCH" SCHMITT, at the dinner. (Sam salt baths, composition for rectifying hal· Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Berger, son, Nicho· ide salt baths. ski lacquer, case hardening 32 February 8, 1984 was one of the founders of the Hartt School las Jarod, September 9, 1983 Lt. and Mrs. Kevin C. Rhodes (Sonia Gon· of Music of the University of Hartford. He composition, process of fluxing metal parts Mr. and Mrs. William D. Elliot, son, Wil­ zalez), daughter, Laura Jean, April 15, is now dean emeritus in 1·esidence at the in joining them, process for blackening iron liam Rives, March 8, 1984 1984 Hartt School.) I was told that BOB and steel and composition of matter there· Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Prelle, Jr., daugh· O'CONNOR was on campus earlier with for, expanded plastics, method of solder· ter, Cristina, January 12, 1984 1976 Mary closely attending him. We were ex· in!;-aluminous metal parts by treating with Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Raho (Elizabeth tremely disappointed not to see them at bromide and iodide fluxes. nylon-rein· 1970 Siener), daughter, Virginia Hodges, the reception. I did meet his brother, G. forced copolymer resins, method of solder· Mr. and Mrs. Eric Aasen, son, Darren March 10, 1984 WALDRON O'CONNOR '24, who told me ing aluminous metal parts by treating with Foster, January 11, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Tranchin (Laurie Brown), about Bob. chloride tluxes, process of forming foamed Mr. and Mrs. David J. Agerton, son, Mark son, Matthew Allen, June 3, 1983 Prexy Jim English, our Class of 1916 products from aldehyde modified alkyds Joseph, April 16, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Walker (Deborah Camalier) "agent," delivered his usual fine welcom· and polyisocyanates, polyester-polyiso· Mr. and Mrs. Alex Belida, son, Brian Re· son, Brian Camalier, February 7, 1984 ing talk after urging us all to strip down to cyanate resins reinforced with fibers con· ber, May 3, 1984 shirtsleeves only. The temperature being taining carbonamide groups, method for Dr. and Mrs. William Bush, daughter, 1977 95 or so, by the bar! We were happy to the production of black oxide coatings on Danielle Mm·ie, Januarv 28, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest R. Bourassa, son, meet with Mrs. English again who ap· steel and iron and composition therefor. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Lenn~x, daughter, Ka· Ernest R., Jr., March 25, 1984 peared to enjoy herself, as usual. formation of corrosion resistant films on . tharine Cornell, April 24, 1983 Mr. and Mrs. John Griglun, daughter. Jen· JERRY HANSEN did a great job too, aluminum, electroplating anode, method Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J . Mattei, daughter, nifer Rebecca, March 31, 1984 welcoming the Class of 1934 into the Half· for the deburring of zinc-base die castings, Amanda Grace, May 27, 1984 Century Club. GEORGE FERRIS regret· method of coating zinc surfaces, and for· Mr. and Mrs. John M. Willin, daughter, 1978 ted at the last moment due to his family mation of corrosion resistant film on alu· Sarah Elizabeth, February 13, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Barndollar (Livia DeFilippis) responsibilities. Charlotte is not at all well. minum. They are all U.S. patents except son, Todd Andrew, January 17, 1984 He hopes to be on campus on Amherst the last which is a Canadian patent. He 1971 Mr. Hochberg and Dr. Nanette C. Harvey, weekend. November 3rd. Let us try and also has one patent pending. Ike is a mem· Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Meyer, Esq., son, Chad Harvey Hochberg, March 22, be there too. ber of 17 professional societies and is daughter, Rachel Grant, July 10, 1983 professionally registered in the states of 1984 Class Agent: James F. English, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Shippee (Starr Badger), Mr. and Mrs. Lamere (Margaret Camp· Connecticut, Vermont, Massachusetts, daughter, Hillary Starr, November 10, bell) son, James Campbell, May 2, 1984 New Hampshire and New York. He is the 1983 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lenahan, daughter, recipient of many engineering honors and Dr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Smith II, daugh· Karen Kennedy, April 4, 1984 'awards. He is an expert on the treatment ter, Karen Frances, May 27, 1983 Mr. and Mrs. Schott (Margaret McKean), Melville E. Shulthiess and purification of water as well as on the Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Sturgess, son, daughter, Alexandra McKean, Febru· Attorney at Law elimination of environmental pollution and Christopher Jeffrey, January 25, 1984 ary 14, 1984 Taunton Hill Rd. wastes. He is active today as a consulting Mr. and Mrs. James Wu, son. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Ziminsky (Megan Ryan), 18 Newtown, CT 064 70 engineer. James, December 22, 1983 daughter, Megan Anne, August 1, 1984 LUKE CELENTANO is still practicing Had a nice note from LIPPY PHISTER medicine at the age of 84. What a noble 1972 1979 recently. Says he is not as good as he used Roman and follower of Hippocrates! Mr. and Mrs. Boothby (Mary-Helen Shep· Mr. and Mrs. Cloyce Hedge (Christine T.), to be on his lower extremities, so spends CONNIE GESNER is serving as "bishop pard), son, James Clifford, March 25, son, Casey, January 16, 1984 six months in Florida when walks are slip· in residence" awaiting the consecration of 1984 pery in the North, a couple months in a newly elected bishop. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Johanson, son, Erik 1980 Maine, and the balance of the year in his WALTER BERUBE died July 6th at the Stephen, February 6, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. John V. Alexandrov II!, son, native Massachusetts. age of 94 (see In Memory). Walt had been Mr. and Mrs. Howard Keifer; son, Adam Jarred Joseph, November 11, 1983 Your Class SECRETARY spent a cou· employed as a salesman by the Phoenix Michael, February 1, 1984 pie of weeks this spring in the Danbury Insurance Company for 35 years before Dr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Mackenzie, twin 1981 Hospital with a bout of pneumonia and his retirement in 1969. He was an army sons, Ian and Christopher, April6, 1984 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Moore, Jr. hasn't been up to much since. No good in veteran of World War I. Mr. and Mrs. David Nichols, son, Law· (Amanda Kohlhas), son, Robert B. III, crowds and not allowed to drive a car as a IKE NEWELL, along with spouse renee Dugan, March 15, 1984 December 2, 1983 result of a hem't attack a year ago. But a Grace, and I attended the Half-Century Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Smith, son, Benja· Mr. and Mrs. Carmen M. Palladino, Jot of people are worse off. Hope to im· Club Reunion at the campus on June 7th. min Austin, June 17, 1983 daughter, Sarah Rose, March 9, 1984 prove to a point where I can take in the We wondered why STAN MILLER and spouse Alice did not make it. Well -I've that he still plays golf eacli! day. He always We have recently seen Florida Golf made an honorary member of the Class of learned from Stan that they were on a trip was a great believer in physical fitness. Week's description of ADAM KNUREK's 1928. He has already been honored by via air, bus and train for three weeks Thanks for your letter, Nick hobby as a golf scorecard collector. He be­ membership in Princeton's Class of 1932. through the middle of the country as far as At the Half-Century Dinner our Class gan with about 300 cards from courses he After lung surgery, ED LAWTON Colorado, taking in th.e Rockies and sev­ was represented by Frances and JIM played or visited. Asking friends for theirs, writes that he is slowly regaining his eral national parks along the way. Let's do BENT, Sally and MORRIS GREEN, he also entered an exchange program with strength and appetite. Here's good health some better planning next year, Stan. We CHILI JACKSON. GEORGE SALISKE other collectors until he acquired 9500 to you, Ed! missed you! and myself. This was our 56th. The affair cards from 8200 courses. Looking through Daye and NATE GLASSMAN enjoyed Class Agent: Sereno B. Gammell was held in the fine, new addition to the Adam's collection has been compared to their trip to Yugoslavia and Italy very College dining halL taking a "journey through golf history." much, although it was tiring. They hope to Adam has had to cut down on his collecting travel in the U.S. more next summer. Your classmates would be pleased to Thomas J . Quinn and concentrate on his health program. He moved to Indiatlantic, FL to be near Pa­ hear of any news - please send it to the 364 Freeman St. trick Air Force Base, where he gets air Alumni Office. Hartford, CT 06106 24 transportation for regular visits to Kees­ Class Agent: Richard C. Meloy ler Air Force Base in Biloxi. MS for chem­ DON CHILDS writes that he is now 82 otherapy. Adam says his last reports have years old and his last job was that of state 29 been encouraging and we are sure the meat and brand inspector. He and his wife GEORGE HEY is teaching Latin at Class of 1930 is cheering him on as we are still living in their old home in Stan­ Haverhill High School (Massachusetts). He always did when he carried the ball. field, OR where they have been for the last is filling in for a teacher who had a heart Class Agent: J. Ronald Regnier, Esq. 33 43 years. attack BILL HAWLEY reports that he retired JACK WARDLAW, after 32 years as GEORGE LACOSKE is now completing from the First Interstate Bank in San regional director for Philadelphia Life for courses for his M.S. degree in economics Diego, CA in 1965. His daughter, Stella the state of North Carolina, has sold his at Southern Connecticut State under their Skitch, received Princess Diana at her franchise back to the company and will senior program. Elmhurst Ballet School in England where continue as executive general agent in Ra­ Class Agent: Thomas S. Wadlow she is assistant director. Son, Deane, is leigh, NC from his offices in the Wardlaw 31 now territorial manager for Syntex Labo­ Building. He will "continue his entertain­ Joyce and TED PETRIKAT '30 stopped ratories in San Diego. ment agency featuring Jack Wardlaw's by on their swing through Florida and G. WALDRON O'CONNOR in a recent singing banjos." note writes, "I hope to get back to Trinity spent a most enjoyable evening with Jean Charles A. Tucker in June for my 60th. There is a vast change Class Agent: Morris J. Cutler, Esq. and HARVEY MATHIASEN. 7 Wintergreen Lane in the externals on the Hill which I want GEORGE MACKIE writes that since the 34 West Hartford. CT 06117 lo see, as well as any classmates who re­ Class of 1931 has no secretary, he has turn. 1920, when we matriculated was a taken it upon himself, as Class agent, to The 50th Reunion of the Class of '34 The Rev. Canon Francis special year. Remsen Ogilby was brand pass along class notes whenever anything is now history and was declared a great Belden new and post WWI was just beginning." of interest comes to his attention. He notes success despite the heat and the power 411 Griffin Rd. Your SECRETARY is keeping busy. that JOHN CHILDS ran in the London failure. South Windsor, CT 06074 Twenty-nine out of seventy-one living Served as Connecticut State Director for 30 marathon on June 13, but reports that he seven years. I just finished my 12th year finished the 26 mile, 385-yard course in the classmates were able to attend - over DAVE SLOSSBERG retired from ac­ as coordinator for the AARP tax aid pro­ "very poor" time offour hours and 59 min­ 40o/o. Those unable Lo return were sorely tive medical practice on December 31, 1983 gram. This p1·ogram helps the elderly in utes. John has fared much better than that missed. - a long career through war

Royden C. Berger 53 Thomson Rd. 28 West Hartford, CT 06107 At a concert in Trinity's Chapel I noticed that a new platform for Trinity's organ console and choir had been constructed. It was made possible by a gift from a member of our Class, HENRY MOSES, his widow and children, and two friends, LYMAN BRAINERD '30 and DAVE HAD LOW '25. An article about the gift appeared in the Spring issue of the Repo-rte1'. NICK MASTRONARDE writes from La Jolla, where it is summer the year around, Class of 1934 The annual alumni parade on Saturday was led by '34 with BRYANT GREEN act­ ing as the class marshal. We admired the great desire, effort and courage of Eva 36 Headliners and BERT HOLLAND to be present. (Ed. Note: The community was saddened by the DR. PHIL BREZINA retired in 1980 and news of Bert's passing on August 17. An has traveled to Russia, Australia, East Af: obituary appears in the In Me·rnory sec­ rica, New Zealand and Europe, to name a tion.) '34 had the highest percentage at­ few of his destinations. He enjoys his sum­ John R. DeMonte '38, an ardent tendance of all the reunion classes and this mer home at Cape Cod whet·e he spends golfer and collector of golf memm·a­ was re~ognized at the alumni(ae) annual much of his time. bilia, has written a two-volume dis­ meeting. It was our honor to present to DESMOND CRAWFORD writes thai he sertation on the sport entitled "The Trinity a class gift of over $100,000 - a still lives in his 30 acre farm in Tuscany, Kings James' Versions of the Games new record. north of Siena. He "produces an excellent We were guests of President and Mrs. Chianti Classico wine." of Golfe," distributed by the Golf English for our class dinner on Saturday DR. HARRY DAVIS plans to retire in Collectors' Society. He has also put night. Several members of the Class 1985. He is a geriatrician in Scottsdale, together an anthology of golf jokes brought us up to date on their families, AZ. His large family includes 11 children, and is working on a golf atlas of the careers and activities. Reminiscences and 25 grandchildren and 1 'h great grand-· Pacific area. anecdotes were the order of the evening. children. The showing of a movie taken by DOUG JACK HANNA and his wife recently GAY when we were undergraduates won Danforth Foundation Associateships broughL back many fond memories. Many and have left Maine. He writes that he views of campus revealed how much of the "hated to ski on weekends only, anyway; appearance had changed, to say nothing of the lift lines are too long." some of our classmates. HERB MORE recently had two open Herbert Bland' 40, past president of Phyllis Mason was able to be present at heart operations at the V.A. Hospital in R.C. Knox Co., In c. insurance bro­ our class dinner and we remembered West Roxbury, MA . He is now recovering kerage firm, has been presented with JOHN, who exemplified the spirit of '34 satisfactorily. the YMCA of Metropolitan Hart­ and Trinity over so many years. BERT SCULL had a pleasant visit with ford's Robert C. Knox, Jr. Distin­ Many people took part in making this a Ruth and AL DOTY '37 in Naples. guished Leadership Award for 1984. LOUIS STEIN was playing in a U.S .T.A. memorable reunion - one worthy of the The award, now in its eighth year, Class of '34. Special thanks go to CHUCK Senior Tennis Tournament at Isla Del Sol. KINGSTON and his '34 reunion commit­ St. Petersburg. FL 3/1/84 when he met was given to Bland "in recognition tee, to JOHN KELLY, our class fund JOHN PARSONS '38 who came to watch of effective and dedicated leadership chairman. to JERRY HANSEN. the Al­ the tennis from his recently purchased of the YMCA." umni(ae) director, and his staff and to GUS nearby winter home. UHLIG who once again provided us with Class Agent: Albert M. Dexter, Jr. our unique uniforms. CHUCK KINGSTON was re-elected as class president, ANDY ONDERDONK as vice-president and YOURS TRULY as L. Barton Wilson Edward C. Barrett "Thought you and other alumni might secretary. 31 Woodland St. 52 Sowams Rd. be interested in a few impressions of our Class Agent: John E. Kelly Hartford, CT 06105 39 Barrington, RI 02806 45th Class Reunion. Previous commit­ 37 ments precluded attendance on Thursday and Friday, but 1 was there on Saturday. Albert W. Baskerville THE REV. JOHN BANKS writes that We boys of '39 (still young at heart, In abundance: POBox548 he is "enjoying retirement among the Tar­ though graying and a bit paunchy) invaded 34 1. Conviviality, nostalgia, camaraderie Derry, NH 03038 heels, indulging in hobbies (beekeeping, the campus on June 7 of '84 to celebrate, 35 2. Enchanting, charming wives bagpiping, and wildflowers) and serving in commemorate, and contemplate our 45 3. Fun - the parade, nostalgic jokes BOB LAU, otherwise known as "Old patient education at North Carolina Mem­ years since our Commencement. And over Faithful," who believes that "The pen is orial Hospital." the four blistering hot days of memorable 4. Sparse hair mightier than the sword," came through STEW ART OGIL VY '36 writes the fol­ festivities, a goodly number of the Class Missing: again with two items. BILL WALKER has lowing letter: "JOEL I. BROOKE. who returned with their lovely ladies: JACK 1. More members of our class been elected to the board of directors of died last year. is being remembered by the WILCOX (Helen), VIC HAMILTON, 2. Entertainment and dancing after the New Jersey Conference of Mayors for Joel Brooke Memorial Project of The Fund MIKE BASSFORD (Betsy), and DICK dinner 1984. Bill is mayor of Hopewell Borough, for Peace. For many years he had been a LEGGETT (Ruth) were there; and so were 3. 1984 paunches on 1939 members NJ. Bob has been re-elected, for the ump­ trustee of the organization and was a re­ BILL COLE, BILL PICKLES (Dottie), Lucked Out: teenth time, committeeman for Ewing· cent past president at the time of his death. and BOB SCHRECK (Carolyn); along with l. Air-conditioned room for our Class Township and Mercer County Democratic The project will provide an information ex­ SHER MARTIN (Gina), LARRY NEW­ Dinner Committee for 1984-1985. Bob, who is post change among the many large and small HALL, BOB BUTLER (Bobbie), and Impressive: commander and current service officer for groups working to extinguish interna­ HANK HAYDEN (Mary); and of course 1. Physical plant of College \vith the American Legion Post 314, was recog­ tional war. Dr. Brooke had worked with a DICK CLOW, TOM SKELLY (Clare), and buildings of former years, the cam­ nized for his more than 20 years of faithful number of those, both religious and secu­ BILL YATES; plus GEORGE SMITH, ED service as both Post 314 and Mercer lar. ever since the Second World War, dur­ pus, and the walk remaining intact SMITH (Mary), FRANK STOCKWELL, 2. Ray Oosting and Wendell Burger County service officer by the presentation ing which he served in the U.S. Coast MILT BUDIN, GEORGE STARKEY, and 3. Members of '39 who attended of two certificates of meritorious service Guard. The new project is being financed your HUMBLE SERVANT with Ruth. from the New Jersey Department of the by a major contribution from Dr. Brooke's Our thanks go out to JERRY HANSEN Organization: American Legion. predecessor as president of The Fund for '51 and Ann Crumb for arranging for us a 1. Terrific- thanks toJOHNWILCOX BILL BASCH reports a first grandchild. Peace and by gifts from many friends. Reunion Weekend that we shall long re­ and ED BARRETT and committee Bill's son, PETER '74, is practicing medi­ More information. in case you are inter­ member. The highlights were: the varied Unbearable: cine in Washington, D.C. ested, might be obtained from Joel's and interesting seminars, the golf and ten­ I. The oppressive heat OLLIE JOHNSON is all ready for the widow, Avery Brooke, 129 Nearwater nis matches, the clambake, the dancing and Dr. HENRY HAYDEN retired as senior trout season in the Berkshires where he Lane, Noroton, CT 06820." socializing in the College Pub, the conviv­ minister of the Community Church in San will gather in the brookies and the rain­ EDWARD COLTON has completed five ial receptions, the Class Dinner, and the Carlos, CA in Jaimary and is now interim bows with wet and dry flies. years as an emergency department volun­ Sunday morning brunch at the JACK minister of the Pleasant Street Congrega­ BILL WETHERELL mentions visiting teer \vith the Tucson Medical Center. He WILCOXes'. At our Class Dinner we were tional Church in Arlington, MA until Sep­ briefly with TERRY MOWBRAY in Ber­ also serves on the board of directors of the honored by the presence of our special tember 4, 1984. muda. townhome association where he lives. guests, the Ray Oostings and the Wen dell Dr. STEPHEN BARTLETT retired Contrary to a previous report, your In April of 1984 ALBERT HASKELL Burgers. And we were favored with a few from the practice of surgery in May of '84, SECRETARY had a lens implant, not an was elected and-installed as president of remarks from our distinguished alumnus, but he will continue to teach med students eye implant, after a cataract operation. the Oakland Council, Navy League. GEORGE STARKEY. JACK WILCOX in Greenville, NC . The 1935 Memorial Fund for the William WILLIAM HULL notes that he and presided over the business for the meeting After 37 years with Aetna Life and Cas­ Warner Scholarship currently stands at Ruth recently had a visit in Sarasota with in which the following slate of officers pre­ ualty, serving in various managerial posi­ $10,676. I'm sorry I haven't written my BRUCE RANDALL and his mother who sented by BOB SCHRECK and his com­ tions in the eastern part of the country, usual begging letter. Send me some and I spent the winter months in Bradenton, FL. mittee was elected: president - JACK FRANK STOCKWELL retired in August promise to answer every one. Class Agent: William G. Hull WILCOX, vice president- VIC HAMIL­ o£'83. ORSON HART reminds me that it is not TON, secretary -ED BARRETT, and Class Agent: Ethan F. Bassford too early to be thinking of the 1984-1985 treasurer- MIKE BASSFORD. All in all, Alumni Fund Drive. After all '85 is our it was an occasion not to be missed, and 50th. Let's stand up and be counted among James M.F. Weir we encourage all of you who were unable the classes who have done well. Trinity 27 Brook Rd. to be with us this time to pledge your at­ (and Orson) deserve our help. 38 Woodbridge, CT 06525 tendance at the 50th. You know, they be­ Incidentally, CAROL BAATZ '83, the come fewer in number after that one! How recipient in 1982-83 of the Warner Schol­ EDWARD SPRING notes that his astro­ about making it to a couple of Homecom­ 40 arship, is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. naut son, "Woody," will be a mission spe· ings between times? Congratulations, Carol! cialist (in space) in February, 1985. Below follow some observations on the THOMAS McLAUGHLIN has been re­ Class Agent: Dr. Orson H. Hart Class Agent: Dr. Joseph G. Astman Reunion by MILT BUDIN to theRep01·ter: tired from Northeast Utilities since 1982. He writes, "Retirement is the greatest!" John L. Bonee Robert, received his M.D. in May from dren have provided him with seven grand­ RICHARD MORRIS is program direc­ 50 State St. Washington University in St. Louis. "An­ children. No wonder he is retiring! tor, editor of the newsletter, and trustee 43 Hartford, CT 06103 other doctor in the family!" His son, David, GEORGE KAYSER is still working like of the Deep River Historical Society. As begins medical school in the fall of 1985. the majority of us. He is now a director of the biographer of Irish-American inventor RAY CUNNINGHAM sends us news Lear Fan Ltd. in Reno, NV. Stay cool! John P. Holland. he is also involved in sup· that he has gone into active early retire­ Class Agents: Siegbert Kaufmann JACK GUNNING reports that Reunion plying information to OTE (Eire TV, Dub­ ment. He states that he is still doing con­ David J. Kazarian, Esq. Weekend was great, in spite of the warm lin) and BBG Channel 4 for a miniseries on sultant work with small parishes, running weather. Those class members who were the life of Holland. The series should be conferences and like activities. He hopes able to attend at least part of our 35th completed by the fall of 1984. to spend more time traveling and at his Reunion were THE REV. SHERM BEAT· THE RT. REV. ALBERT W. VAN house in "downeast" Maine. Paul J. Kingston TIE, Eva and BOB BOWDEN, BUZZ FA­ DUZER is enjoying his retirement. He WALT HAJEK advises that he has re­ Barbourtown Rd., RFD 1 GAN, DOUG HARDING, Helen and JOHN serves on the board of Cooper Hospital tired from Shell Oil Company in Houston, 47 Collinsville, CT 06022 PHELAN, DR. JOHN ROOT and his wife, and Medical College and also assists TX, after thirty-six years of service. He is Shirley and CARL STEIDEL, Mary and BISHOP LYMAN OGILBY '43 of Penn­ now living in San Diego, CA as a self­ FREDERICK POPE will retire on De­ JOHN GRIFFIN, SCOTTY DUNCAN, sylvania and Bishop Paul Moore of New employed insurance consultant. Walt will cember 31 after 35 years in the parish min­ and Charleen and JACK GUNNING. York whenever they need help. be interested to known that your SECRE­ istry of the Episcopal church, including 18 Julia and JACK WHITE of Fredericks­ T A RY serves on the board of the Boys' years as rector of St. Stephen's in Fergu­ Class Agent: Joseph A. DeGrandi, Esq. burg, TX write that they hope to spend Clubs of Hartford with his brother, Albert. son, MO. their retirement visiting Indian ruins, BOB HALL writes that his daughter was BILL THOMSEN writes, "Retirement hunting artifacts and doing photography, married in June and his son in July. Con­ is great - try it!" mostly in Arizona and New Mexico. gratulations, Robert! Bob also writes that GEORGE WICKS' son, JONATHAN, Robert Tansill Class Agent: Walter E. Borin his granddaughter was nine years of age and daughter, LESLIE, graduated from 270 White Oak Ridge Rd. on May 10, 1984. This must be the "mar­ Trinity this year with the Glass of 1984. 5 0 Short Hills, NJ 07078 rying season" as your SECRETARY and Class Agent: Merritt Johnquest his wife, Elaine, have a daughter, LISA NED WILLIAMS and his freshman year roommate, BOB WOOD, recently met and Frank A. Kelly, Jr. '78, who will be married in August. had lunch - their first get-together since 21 Forest Dr. BOB HINCKLEY advises us that he will graduation in June, 1950. Newington, CT 06111 soon enter retirement, working three days 41 a week. He plans to give more time to five Rt. Rev. E. Otis Charles ARTHUR WILLS has moved from grandsons, golf and volunteer work. 1349 3rd Ave. Scarsdale, NY to 13125 Chadwick Court, LOU BUCK reports: "Have moved to Salt Lake City, UT 84103 Apartment 1, West Palm Beach, FL 33414 Florida permanently. See BILL OLIVER RALPH MONAGHAN advises us that 48 he has a new granddaughter named Leigh. (305) 965-8400. He is general manager of occasionally. Both of us are members of CHUCK BRIE ANT has served the Epis­ The Fountains Country Club in Lake the Vero Beach Yacht Club. Spend most of Congratulations, Ralph! DICK TULLAR writes that he and one copal Church of St. Paul in DeKalb, IL for Worth, FL. He would like to hear from any my time fishing and playing tennis." Lou's twenty-one years as vicar and, now. rec­ classmates who visit in his area. new address is 129 Park Shores Circle, of his fraternity brothers from Alpha Delta Phi, ED CRAIG '34, see one another at tor. After 107 years, St. Paul's became RALPH LASHER had balloon cath­ #20E, Vero Beach, FL 32963. an independent parish of the Diocese of eterization of the right coronary artery a When we last heard from BILL RYAN monthly meetings of the San Diego Boys' Club Board. Chicago. year ago, as an alternate to bypass. Good he had moved from Monterey, CA to ED BURNS has been hospitalized five news is he's doing well. Kauai. in the Hawaiian Islands. Appar­ RANDY SHARP writes as to how much he and his wife enjoyed our 30th Reunion times in the past year resulting from kid­ JOHN STROTHER is retired from RCA ently wanderlust has not relaxed its grip ney failure and "horrible" blood chemis­ astro division and has formed Stron Corp. because his new address is 133 Grand View last June. He also writes that they are "about traveled out," having made four try. DR. JAMES DOUGHERTY was re­ in Leucadia, CA, which Bill proudly de­ BILL GLAZIER is the co-inventor of a elected to the board of trustees of Albany scribes as "flower capital of the world." trips last year, and are now headed for Australia, Bali and Indonesia. new version of chess called "Chexxmate" Medical College in April of this year. The Ryans have kept their home in Kauai that allows from two to six players to com­ ROBERT COHAN reached the young and still are under the spell of the Islands pete as individuals or as partners. age of 60 in November, 1983. In April he since Bill concludes with "Aloha." "WINKY" GLEASON (Dr. Harold W.) opened branches of Denton & Co. in New 35 More than 350 persons gathered in April has retired as a colonel in the U.S. Army Jersey and Maine- sounds as ifthat'sjust to honor TED KNUREK on his retirement Lockwood R. Doty II Reserve. He is a life member of the Cham­ the start of a new career. from what is believed to be the longest bersbmg, P A Road Runners Club. ED CARTER retired from The Travel­ career in the history of Connecticut school­ 3603 Oval Dr. Alexandria, VA 22305 TONY LONGO is retired from PWA and ers Insurance Co. in May, 1980 and lives boy football. Among those present was his 44 now works at Gaua[ Tool and Machine, Inc. at 400 NE 20 St., #202 B., Boca Raton, Trinity basketball coach, Ray Oosting. JOHN DAY, JR. writes that he has three as a level three X-ray examiner. FL. He is teaching part time in Boca Raton Ted's exploits have been chronicled at JOE SCHACHTER's company, Con· High School, is active in the local GOP and length in my reports. I can only add that grandchildren - two boys, aged 5 and 3, and one girl, 6 months. crete Flotation Systems, supplies floating is taking graduate courses at F.A.U. Ed­ his coaching record ranks 25th in the coun­ marinas up and down the east coast. His cali ART WILLS. try among high school football coaches. LAURENCE ROBERTS, JR. notes that he "played a full soccer game last fall in wife, Irma, is in management at the Stam­ RON WATSON retired in August and DICK BARNES reti1·ed in April from ford Bloomingdale's; son, Ted, is an attor­ moved to Chapel Hill, NC. Aetna Life and Casualty Company. faculty/student game. (Only 11 faculty showed, so there were no subs.) Gave 61st ney with Home Box Office in New York BILL PITKrN is recovering from a heart Class Agent: John T. Carpenter pint of blood on January 13, 1984. Second City; Stephen is an accupuncturist in North attack. He writes that his son was married granddaughter born March 3, 1984." Carolina; and David is designing software at the College Chapel in May. CLEMENT DOWD is now semi-retired for computers. EVERETT BENNETT was also mar· in Newport Beach. Your SECRETARY has begun a mas­ ri~d in the College Chapel in February. ter's degree program in Christian Spiritu­ (see Weddings). Class Agel)t: Elliott K. Stein Martin D. Wood ality at the Creighton University summer DICK GOODRICH retired from the 4741 23rd St. North session. Son, Christopher. was an alter­ White Plains, NY school system where he 42 Arlington, VA 22207 nate delegate to the Democratic National was an English teacher. Andrew W. Milligan Convention from Connecticut; daughter is DON SHEEN is retired and living in Ba· JOE BEIDLER received the Dedication 15 Fonthill Park director of the Governor's Utah State Of­ caville, CA where he is now in the invest­ Award from the Northern Connecticut 45 Bloomfield, CT 06002 fice in Washington, D.C.; son, Timothy, is ment business and starting a small bank. Chapter of the National Football Founda­ administrative director of psychiatric PETER VAN METRE is a district judge tion and Hall of Fame at a scholarship/ ROBERT CROSS has retired and is liv­ services at the 500-bed Latter Day Saints' for the state of Iowa and is located in athlete dinner in April of this year. Con­ ing at 46 Burroughs Hall, Kiawah Island, Hospital in Salt Lake City; son, Nicholas, Waterloo, !A. gratulations, Joe! sc 29455. is ranching in California and daughter, El­ DAVE BELLIS moved from Philadel­ JACK BARBER and Ruth have sold ROBERT HAWKINS was recently vira, is an accountant with Northwest En­ phia to Washington, D.C., as a result of their family business, the Barber Travel awarded the Independence Foundation ergy Company. Elvira senior continues to the AT&T break up. Service, Inc., to Trombley Travel, Inc. Jack Chair at The Hotchkiss School where he support me in my work as bishop and de­ Our 35th Reunion will be held this com­ and Ruth are now outside sales represen­ has been teaching since his graduation velop her own career at the Phillips Gal­ ing June; a committee has been formed tatives for the agency operating out of from Trinity. His latest book, A Minimal lery in Salt Lake City. and big plans are afoot. We're looking for their home. Course in Literacy, should be published by Class Agent: David H. Rivkin a big turnout, and details, including dates, BOB ROSENTHAL will have Gompleted the end ofthe year. will be sent to you soon. 36 years as a chemist with the U.S. Food Class Agent: Andrew W. Milligan Class Agent: F. Scott Billyou and Drug Administration. If you include Lt. Col. John G. Grill, Jr. his W.W.JI service, he will have been serv­ Charles I. Tenney, CLU ing the country for 40 years. Charles I. Tenney & Assoc. Fran and JOHN SWIFT have completed Louis Raden J. William Vincent 6 Bryn Mawr Ave. General Tape Supply, Inc. their first year in Saudi Arabia. They re­ 80 Newport Ave. Bryn Mawr, PA 19010 port it is a beautiful land of which they 49 7451 W. S-Mile Rd. 4 6 West Hartford, CT 06107 51 Detroit, MI 48221 have seen a great deal. I gather from read­ There is not much news to report this ing between the lines that living there in­ During the month of April JOHN FER­ summer except SUMNER W. SHEP­ As I write this news of our class our first volves many diffiGulties and compromises. RANTE starred in a new "P.D.Q. Bach" HERD III and JOHN R. BLAND are both granddaughter is celebrating her first CHARLIE FRESHER let us h-now that opera with the Minnesota Opera Com­ retiring from The Travelers Insurance birthday! With the youngest among us in son Charles has just completed the law­ pany. He went to Italy (Siena) for his fourth Company this year. Those home office peo­ the middle 50s, it's amazing to realize that yers military justice course at the Naval summer to teach, lecture and sing in ple always had it easy! John further re­ just yesterday we were underclassmen at Justice School in Newport, RI. Tuscany. ports that he has five children, two sons Trinity. Class Agent: Milford F. Rhines, Esq. HERBERT HERR writes that his son, and three daughters. Four of these chil- DR. ED BRENNAN has three Trinity writer. ln addition to writing copy in all Paul A. Mortell media, I also write and edit the University 75713 Quinnipiac La. Health CenteT Nwsletter, the Given Health Stratford, CT 06497 Headliner 53 Care Center Nwsletter (both connected John Rossner '52 was selected to with the Medical Center Hospital of Ver­ give the M.T. Garvin Lecture for JOHN BIRD writes with news •hat his mont, University of Vermont Medical 1984. Previous holders of the lec­ daughter, Emily. has been accepted at School), and the Glucose Gazette (newslet­ tureship have included Paul Tillich, Stanford. He has recently moved to Wal­ ter of the American Diabetes Association Reinhold Niebhur and Margaret nut Creek, CA. - Vermont Affiliate). I just signed on as SANDY DWIGHT notes that his daugh­ an editorial consultant and feature writer Mead. Rossner recently completed ter was married on June 16th. for a new monthly magazine covering the his 23rd year as university professor PHILIP MALLON, former captain of Greater Burlington area called Business at Concordia University and cele­ Trinity's tennis team, is currently ranked Digest; first issue out in June." brated his 25th anniversary of ordi­ #3 in doubles in Florida by the F.T.A. JIM MITCHELL is now general man­ nation into the priesthood. He has STAN McCANDLESS writes from ;tger of Midland Ross. Pel-feet-Line Divi­ published 3 volumes in the 5-book Texas that if any classmates "make it to sion, in Amityville, NY. series, Toward Recovery of the Pri­ Houston," they should give him a call. His RON PEPPE sends news of his children: mordial Tradition. business telephone is (713) 795-2103, and Ron II graduated with an M.A. from the his residence number is (713) 669-1830. Johns Hopkins University School of Ad­ BILL ROMAINE is busy building a new vanced International Studies this June. He data system for HQ Strategic Air Com­ will begin law school in the fall. Melissa mand for use in Omaha. It features a color Lynn has just finished her freshman year graduates in his family now that his second Douglas C. Lee graphic executive work station for senior at Johns Hopkins, and Suzanne is finishing daughter graduated in the Class of '84. P.O. Box 5321 managers. her third year at Hood College, where she The Hartford Courant recently wrote an 52 Modesto, CA 95352 BOB HANDY has just added a second is majoring in special education. article on DICK BUCKLEY saying that he doctoral degree. First was Ph.D. in electri­ GENE ROCHETTE is manager of sales is the 1984 president of the Greater Hart­ ROBERT DUBUQUE has joined the cal engineering from Northwestern in and proposals for Optimized Process Fur­ ford Board of Real tors. Warner Insurance Group as a broker ac­ 1962. In May of '84, he received a J.D. naces, Inc. in Chanute, KN. Heard from DAVE COLLIER. who is an count executive in New York City. In this from Arizona State University College of BOB VAN BRO'l'T continues to hold associate professor at Mercer County position, he will produce and service busi­ Law (cum laude). Bob will practice patent elective office as vice president, board of Community College in Trenton, NJ, that ness through insurance brokers in the met­ law for the same employer, Motorola, Inc. commissioners, Lower Merion Township, he has been elected president of the Tren­ ropolitan New York area. Class Agents: Dirck Barhydt, Peter and president, Montg0me1·y County Asso­ ton Historical Society. MAURICE FREMONT-SMITH is cur­ B. Clifford, Sanford ciation of First Class Township Officials HOBART JOHNSON is living in Red­ rently executive director of the Trimount A. Dwight and member of the Penn~ylvania State As­ wood City, CA and he wrote us the news Foundation, Inc. in Boston. He notes that sociation of First Class Tcwnships execu­ of his son, Fletcher, marrying Helen a 7th grandchild is on the way. tive board of directors. Lucine of Saratoga, CA this past May. RICHARD HUNGERFORD will retire Theodore T. Tansi ARTHUR WILSON's son, Dick, gradu­ RAY LANG writes from his home in Ge­ from teaching and practice and plans to Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co. ated from Princeton this June with a B.A. neva. IL that he was promoted to vice move to Arizona. 1 American Row from Woodrow Wilson School of Interna­ president of Riverside Publishing Co. of THE REV. KENNETH KINNER is Hartford,CT 06103 tional Studies. Daughter, Heather, com­ Chicago, IL. Riverside is a subsidiary of founder of the Anglican Catholic Church 54 pletes her freshman year at the University Houghton Mifflin Co. of Boston, MA. Ray of the Holy Family and is serving people FRED MACCOLL notes that the Class of Texas. has been with Riverside since it started in in Casper and on the Wind River Indian of '54 is to be congratulated for setting an Class Agent: Alfred M.C. MacColl 1979. Reservation in Casper, WY. all-time class giving record for a 30th re­ JOHN MeGA W sent a note saying his E. C. MORRISEY retired in June and is union year class gift. The Class was p!·e­ son, Bruce, is now a senior at Evergreen serving as training advisor to the director sented with an award for the gift, which E . Wade Close, Jr. 36 State in Olympia, W A, and his daughter, of the Air National Guard. was over $60,000. 96 West Waltheim Rd. Cathy, graduated this year from the Uni- . ISAAC NEWELL, JR. was recently Barbara and DICK ADAMS own and op­ 55 Pittsburgh, PA 15215 versity of Puget Sound in Tacoma, WA. made regional manager for Maine Mutual erate a bed and breakfast facility in La­ He is looking forward to this fall's home­ Group of Insurance Cos. at the Concord guna Beach, CA. DAVID HOAG was made a fellow of the coming at Trinity. regional office responsible for New Hamp­ FREDERICK BROWN writes news of International Council of Sex Education and ALEC SIMPSON wrote us from his shire and Vermont. his children: daughter, Jennifer, gradu­ Parenthood of The American University. home in Newport Beach, CA bringing us GORDON PHELPS is vice president/in­ ated in May from Mt. Holyoke and son, RICHARD KOPP notes that his daugh­ up to date on his family. His daughter, vestments for A. G. Edwards and Sons, Inc. Frederick III, is a junior at Kimball Union ter. Deidre, has graduated fTom college Kate, married Daniel Carl Fortmiller last in Essex. Academy. Fred is vice president/sales for and that "our last college expenses are March. Both graduated from Lewis and FRANK STONE opened two new Miller Fluid Power in Bensenville, IL. over.~~ Clark College in Portland, OR and now live agency offices in Houston, TX and Sunny­ PETER CARLOUGH writes, "I have DANIEL MILLER writes that he has there. His son. Sandy, was on NBC's "V." vale, CA. He notes the arrival of two new sold my interest in Carlough & Sandage been "promoted to director in the data airing in May, 1984. grandsons in Santiago, Chile. Advertising last year and have since been processing department at The Travelers Class Agent: James B. Curtin, Esq. Class Agent: William M. Vibert working out of my home as a free-lance Insurance Company in Hartford in Febru­ ary. Our oldest daughter, Cynthia, gradu­ ated from SUNY at Potsdam, NY in May with a computer and information sciences major. This was our year to have all three in college at once. with David also studying computer science at Potsdam and Nancy studying marketing at Bryant College in Rhode Island, of which classmate BILL O'HARA is president (saw Bill and wife at orientation)." DAVID NELSON is "doing lots of local organizing for a bilateral nuclear freeze." HENRY SCHEINBF~RG's company, Arrays Inc. where he is the executive vice president and a founding owner, had a suc­ cessful public offering in January, 1984. Pam and ROBERT WELSH bought a farm in Sherborn. MA. He says, "First purchase was a tractor for Pam." Class Agent: Joseph V. Reineman.'Sr.

Bruce MacDonald 1116 Weed St. 56 New Canaan, CT 06840 BILL R. SMITH III, president of Micro­ wave Associates, Inc. recently married Linda Fitzsimmons and they are living in Huntington, CT. Congratulations! ALAN SCHAERTEL reports that he is business financial evill spend NISH, Cynthia and MYLES Me· Class picture that accompanies this arti­ century. the academic year 1984-85 at Benedict DONOUGH. Again, special thanks to cle, please feel free to call me collect (212) JIM WIEGMAN, now compensation ad­ College in Columbia, SC teaching mathe­ CHARLIE WEEKS for orchestrating the 688-8000 ... would love to chat with you. ministrator of General Dynamics, Pomona matics. jazz concert (Weeks' Hornblowers) after (What do you mean, we don't look the Division, Pomona, CA, has moved into the JOHN TROTT will soon be moving from the clambake. Gathered in front of Nor· same??) high rent district with a new address at Wilmette, IL to northern New Jersey tham and Jarvis for the music, DOUG Would like to personally thank those 1196 Las Lomas Drive #A, La Habra. CA where he is an executive director with FROST and his daughter, "Tenny," Ad­ classmates for their many hours of work 90631. Jim gives no telephone number, as MEMA of Teaneck, NJ. JOE REPOLE is rienne and GENE LINDEMANN, Jerry on the telephones and for your kind letters he wants advance notice by mail before now vice president/administration and fi­ and H. LARRY WEIL. WALT GRAHAM of appreciation but the "thanks" really go anyone drops in to see him. Jim was the nance at LEA Group. Inc. in Boston, MA. demonstrated his "pipes" haven't rusted to the efforts of the College. A note of last one to leave the 25th Reunion and PETER SMITH sent the "super news" as he gave us several up-tempo interpre­ interest for those '59ers who couldn't promises to be the first one back for the that his daughter will join the Class of 1988 tations with his wife Lorna leading ap­ be with us due to outside conflicts, there is 30th. Jim writes that he enjoyed seeing at Trin this year where her brother is a plause, along with MaryLou & BILL already in existence a "groundswell of en­ GERALD HANSEN '51 at the California member of the Class of 1986. GEORGE LUKENS. Rosi and PETER Me­ thusiasm" for a mini-reunion this fall at Alumni Meeting and sends his best to ROB BAXTER's daughter, Natalie, graduated ILWAINE, also WARREN FREEMAN Homecoming time ... again, contact me if WINSLOW. from Mount Holyoke in 1982 and has com­ ... other toe-tappers included Denny and you are interested. I already have commit­ The guys in the life insurance business pleted her first year in a management CHARLIE NICHOLS, Anne and BILL ments from 19 classmates but would need certainly know about actuary tables and training program at Smith Kline Beck­ ELWELL and Jean and JERRY MUIR. a definitive number if I were to work with DICK BEHR, marketing administrator of man, while son, George, Jr., is a junior at Saturday was a fun day of seminars, the Alumni office to arrange for a Class Penn Mutual Life Insurance, and now a Beloit spending the first semester this year tours, lectures, and some very fierce ten­ party room. Let me know! gmndfather. has figured out that if his life in Florence. BOB BACK writes that his nis. Thanks to campus director TOM News from DON FARMER indicates expectancy continues to grow and his chil- son, Chris, completed his freshman year at "Deals" KNORR, our tennis tournament that he has been appointed academic dean PHILIP BABIN is vice president of Metropolitan Insurance Company and is located in San Francisco, CA. He writes, "Love the city of San Francisco. Stop by to visit me." PHILIP LOVELL has relocated to the Boston area where he is now project exec­ utive for Turner Construction Company. ALAN MANDELL has been elected to the board of governors for the Connecticut Society of Certified Public Accountants. DR. NEIL NEWBERG's son, Eric, will be entering Trinity in the fall with the Class of 1988. RANDY RYAN writes, "Amazingly sta­ ble - same job for 17 years; same wife (Pam) for 22 years; two nice teenage kids (Kathy 17, Greg 15); same house for 16 years; play tennis, golf, and coach base­ ball." WILLIAM SULLIVAN, formerly en­ forcement counsel of the United States Environmental Protection Agency, is now a partner in the law firm of Sullivan, Mat­ teo, Rabil and Norcross located in Wash­ ington, D.C. Class Agent: DaleN. Peatman

Francis J. Cummings, M.D. 55 Chapin Rd. 62 Barrington, RI 02806 The Class of '62 is active! News is com­ ing in from all over. From the West, DAVE ALBERTS reports he spent six months in London doing a sabbatical at the Royal Cancer Hospital. Upon his return, he vis· ited LARRY LE WINN at his "Ponde· Class of 1959 rosa·• in Danville, PA and ALAN at King's College located in Wilkes-Barre, (PETER DUNNING) his family in Athens last summer. "His RUDNICK in Malibu, CA - that's Middle PA. In December, 1983, he addressed the Brendan "Tim" Shea two children and mine are great friends." Age Crisis, Trinity style! BOB FLORIAN! writes that he is chief chemist at Deft, Inc. annual meeting of the Middle States As· (BRENDAN SHEA) Class Agent: George P. Kroh in Irvine, CA and is living in Corona, CA. sociation on "Planning for Excellence." Class Agent: William J. Schreiner BOB HARNISH, owner of the Cortina JACK BAKER is racing a 41-foot sloop 38 Inn Resort in Mendon, VT has joined the down the west coast from San Francisco Rutland office of Country Business, Inc. Gordon P. Ramsey, Esq. to Catalina this summer. He invites all in Ramsey and Murray the San Francisco area to give him a call. as a special consultant to the hospitality Lloyd M. Costley, Esq. One Washington Mall DAN TUERK is a plastic surgeon at the industry. 152834thSt.,N.W. Boston, MA 02108 Kaiser Foundation Hospital in Hayward, In June, 1984, DR. ARNOLD LIEBER Washington, D.C. 20007 61 was named chief of psychiatry and medical 60 CA and recently has been appointed chief JACK ANGELL has established his own of the department of surgery there. DOUG director of the clinical neuroscience center ROBERT ADAMS completed th.e doctor financial consulting firm - Angell & Co., SPENCER has been promoted to Colonel of St. Francis Hospital in Miami Beach, of psychology degree (with specialty in Inc. - specializing in mergers and acqui­ in the U.S. Air Force. FL. clinical psychology) at Florida Institute of sitions of private companies. From the Midwest, DON PINE tells us The following note was received from Technology in December, 1983. He is cur­ RICHARD PFLUEGER: "Celebrated rently employed as a staff psychologist at 23rd anniversary January '84; 5 children; Southern Hills Mental Health Center, Inc. 23 yrs. in insurance; Washington- rainy, in Rockport, IN. beautiful, been here five years; would hke ROBERT BRUSH has spent the past to return to Trinity for visit this year, but year as a Bullard Fellow at Harvard. Headliners difficult to fit into schedule; insurance bro· STEPHEN CLAHR is vice president/ kerage requires much time- fast pace." partner at the September Group in Los JACK THOMPSON is vice president of Angeles, CA. Henderson Advertising in Greenville, SC. GEE HERCKSCHER, his wife, Janet, William Richardson '62 has been ANDRE LaROCHELLE has returned and three children live in San Francisco named executive vice president and to the Hartford area. He has been ap­ where Gee is in the business of rchabilitat· pointed executive .director of The Gables provost at the Pennsylvania State ing older buildings in the downtown area. University, where he will be the chief which is a newly built congregate resi· CLARK PHIPPEN writes that he has dencc facility for the elderly in the Old "enjoyed five years of managing Conoco's academic officer. Richardson was re· Farms Forest area near Farmington. university relations program. The transfer cently dean of the graduate school Sons and daughters of '59 Alumni: of Conoco's headquarters from Stamford and provost for research at the Uni­ Class of '84 to Wilmington, DE in July, 1983 has versity of Washington in Seattle. Jonathan Goodman lengthened my commute. Roots and high (PAUL GOODMAN) school age sons have kept the homestead Class of '85 in Connecticut." Leah Edwards BARRY ROYDEN's daughter, Amy, (JACOB EDWARDS) graduated class valedictorian and will be attending the University of Virginia as an Class of '86 Echols Scholar in the fall. His daughter, Peter J. Meehan '62 has been named Jennifer Hardman president of the Computer Circuitry (G. DAVID HARDMAN) Lisa, is doing well in soccer and Sarah "led her class in aerobics! I'm playing tennis Michelle Wyckoff Group in North Carolina, a division (GEORGE VlYCKOFF) here and enjoying life in Europe." Barry of Insilco Corporation of Meriden, writes of his marriage on March 6, 1982 to Class of '87 CT. The Computer Circuitry Group Brenda Kaye and birth of daughter, Mich· consists of five companies that sup­ Kathryn Graham elle Ann, on March 14, 1984. (GEORGE GRAHAM) RICHARD STOCKTON's daughter is ply products and services to the elec­ Geoffrey Judge looking at Trinity for the Class of 1989. tronics industry. Before joining (ARTHUR JUDGE) His son, the older of two boys, is starting Insilco in 1979 as a vice president of Class of '88 at Exeter as a sophomore in Jeptember. operations, Meehan was with Pitts­ Elizabeth Hardman BRUCE STONE says that he saw burgh-Corning Corp. (G. DAVID HARDMAN) STEVE SISKIND who is practicing law in Jennifer Campion New York. He also saw DR. ART GREEN (PAUL CAMPION) in Florida recently. Bruce spent six weeks William Dunning visiting GEORGE ENEPEKIDES '58 and that he has been selected for the Bush Keith S. Watson, Esq. Clinical Fellows program for full- time mid­ 8520 River Rock Terrace cat·eer professional development. He is 64 Bethesda, MD 20034 presently a family physician in Minneapo­ Headliners lis,MN. DR. RICHARD BLOOMSTEIN is relo­ Moving east, ROBERT GROSS is now cating his office to a new, larger space in head of the upper school of Friends Select his own building at 41 North Livingston School in Philadelphia and is still living in Ave., Livingston, NJ. Swarthmore, PA. BOB HOPKINS of RON BOSCH is director of information Bruce W. Frier '64 has been Cockeysville, MD was promoted to vice systems operations for Emery Worldwide awarded the Goodwin Award of president, trust division at Union Trust in Wilton. He will be moving to Southbury Merit from the American Philologi­ Bank in Baltimore. DON WOODRUFF this summer. cal Association for his book Land­ was elected to the Century Club by the MICHAEL BOYLE is a member of the lO?·ds and Tenants in Imperial Rome United States Lacrosse Coaches Associa­ law firm of Heneghan, Pikor, Kennedy & (Princeton, 1980). He has also re­ tion. THE REV. DR. CHARLES L. Allen, which has opened a new office at 21 ceived a Guggenheim Fellowship for HOFFMAN writes that his daughter, Eliz­ New Britain Avenue in Rocky Hill. abeth, graduated from Wesleyan this year. WILLIAM CAMPBELL, JR.'s daugh­ a year of sabbatical study at Cam­ BRAD KETCHUM sends out a Trinity ter, Heather, is a freshman at Lafayette bridge University. Challenge to anyone in '62 who can top his College. Bill will be attending the second exemptions - son, Simeon, in kindergar­ week of the Olympics and says, "Say 'hello' ten, daughter, Amy, a freshman in high if you're going also." school, and son, Brad III, a freshman at J .F. CHANDOR is vice president and John H. Makin '65 recently pub­ the University of New Hampshire. PETE head of international sales for Merrill REINTHALER from Bellaire, TX says it's Lynch Capital Markets in New York City. lished The Global Debt Cr·isis: A·rner­ no sweat. With his marriage to Audi MICHAEL DOLS is the author of the ica's Growing Involvement. A pro­ Thomas, they now have eighteen kids be­ publication, Med:ieval Islamic Medicine, fessor of economics and director of tween them - his three, her two and thir­ University of California Press: Berkeley the Institute of Economic Research teen adoptive/foster children. Can any and Los Angeles, 1984. at the University of Washington, other '62er beat that? SCOTT GREGORY has been elected a Makin is a former consultant to the That's all for now. Hope everyone is hav­ principal of William M. Mercer, Inc. International Monetary Fund and at ing a fine summer. ROBERT MACDOUGALL is teaching the U.S. Treasury. He has also writ­ Class Agent: Samuel Bailey IV, Esq. 6th grade in the Los Angeles Unified School District. He says the job is "stren­ ten Elements of Money and Theory of uous and challenging and quite a change Economic Policy as well as articles Timothy F. Lenichek from the private schools I'm used to. Most for professional publications. 25 Kidder Ave. students are immigrants from Mexico, 63 Somerville, MA 02144 Salvador, and Guatemala.'' In a letter to the Alumni Office JOHN WALT BURINSKAS is business man­ OGDEN, chief of staff of the Shriners Hos­ pital for crippled children, Tampa Unit, The Rev. George E. Andrews II '66 ager for Econo-Call, Inc. in Biloxi, MS. has been named headmaster of St. RUFUS COES, JR. writes, "Among my writes, "I recently chose to leave Yale and accomplishments I count six children. Old­ Connecticut and migrate to the South. The George's School in Newport, RI. est, Pat, is a freshman at Trin. Youngest, Shriners are building a new hospital de­ Previously, he was dean of students Julia and Emily, were five April 12. In voted to children's orthopedic problems in of the University Liggett School in between are Ben, Nellie, and Michelle." Tampa. Additionally, they are construct­ Grosse Pointe Woods, MI. BRENT DAVIS is a television and mo­ ing a large research laboratory. This is a tion pictw·e actor and a lieutenant colonel very exciting opportunity to help develop 39 in the U.S.M.C. Reserves. His son, Geof­ a major research hospital and essentially frey, is two years old . an offer I could not refuse. I hope that the BILL FOX is president of Fox & Lazo members of the Class of 1964 who get tired Realtors in Cherry Hill, NJ. of the cold weather will drop in." BILL GALE's wife has just finished a KEN PARSONS is ·an attorney with "very successful stint as general chairman Shuster and Parsons law firm in Char­ of Cincinnati Antiques Festival. I'm hav­ lotte, NC. ing a fine time sniffing out small highly DR. ROBERT PECK says, "Say 'hello' impressive investment opportunities and to STEVE FEIN." Property Company in Dallas, TX (12340 DAVID PYLE is senior associate with Oil business still slow, but picking up. Come putting together partnerships to finance Inwood Road, Dallas, TX 75380; 214-233- visit World's Fair.'' the John Snow Public Health Group, Inc. them." 5555). W. DEAN WALLACE, JR. is "busy in Boston, MA. PETER GIORGIO has started his own RICHARD DUNLOP was recently pro­ murdering people . .. or at least he is writ­ JOHN WITHERI!'l'GTON, JR. has been executive management consulting firm. moted to vice chairman of the board and ing a novel in which bodies abound." They specialize in strategic planning and promoted to manager of employee rela­ treasurer of American Stores Company, Class Agent: F. Carl Schumacher, Jr. development of human capital, with par­ tions for Bamberger's, the largest division 709 West South Temple Street, Salt Lake ticular emphasis on the integration of hu­ of the R.H. Macy Corporation. City, UT 84102 (801-539-0112). man resources plans with future business ARNOLD WOOD, senior vice president SAM EARNSHAW is playing his violin plans. He writes, "My professional expe­ of Batterymarch Financial Management of on a five-year tour of Europe. His mailing Dr. Randolph M. Lee riences as a manager and educator have Boston, MA, has been elected director-at­ address is 1672 Rue De La Corte, Paris, 65 Vern on St. proven invaluable in launching this ven­ large of Financial Analysts Federation. France. 66 Hartford, CT 06105 ture. Our first year has been successful OTTO ZINSER has published a textbook ANDREW FAIRFIELD, assistant to beyond our wildest expectation." with McGraw Hill Book Company titled, the Bishop of Alaska, will be on sabbatical We hear from CHA~t;ES' WESTON MICHAEL HILL has been named sen­ Basic Pri'Miples ofE:r:JH!'I-imental Psychol­ leave from this post, August-December, that he is now settled ill ·his new home in ior vice president for Shimer/vonCantz Inc. ogy. Otto is currently the chairman of the 1984, in Shrewsbury, MA. Kifissia, Greece, having moved there from In his new position, he will be involved in department of psychology at East Tennes­ PHILIP K. HOPKE will be spending the Austria last September. Charles is area marketing and client services, focusing on see State University. 1984-85 academic year on sabbatical leave manager for Monsanto. Charles wrote that new business acquisition, research and Class Agent: Kenneth R. Auerbach at The Free University of Brussels, where he was expecting a visit from his brother­ media strategy. He will act as a client liai­ he will be studying the application of sta­ in-law, CHAR.LIE BARRINGER, last son and supervise agency account manage­ tistical methods to analytical and environ­ spring, and we received a separate note The Rev. David J. Graybill ment teams. mental chemistry problems. from Charlie saying that he left Langston 9612 Byforde Rd. BOB PERRIN was one of 70 S1,000,000 Since February, 1984, BRUCE JAY, his in January and is now looking for another producers at Merrill Lynch in Palm Beach, 65 Kensington, MD 20796 wife and four children, have been living in internationally oriented job involving less FL in 1983. The firm sent him to Sara,jevo MARK G. ARON is now general counsel Montevideo, Uruguay. He writes that it traveling. for the 1984 winter olympics. He was re­ fo r CSX Corporation, a transportation "seems as if the American Federation of Also doing some traveling is PETE cently elected vice president. (Chessie and Seaboard Systems) and nat­ Labor wants me to win the distance award PERHONIS who is visiting Crete this DONALD SMITH started an invest­ ural resources company. Mark's address is at the next class reunion.'' swnmer for some background work in or­ ment management company in January, Box C-32222, Richmond, VA (804-740- PETER S. PRENTICE has just moved der to complete his new play, Island of the 1984. Among his first clients are Harvard 5905). to the U.S. Naval Station, Rota, Spain, to Cyclops. Pete's first play, Stop Over on College, Allied Corp. and City Investing. Last spring E. THAYER BIGELOW work at the naval hospital there as head of Whitney Street, ran for four showcase per' He notes that he currently manages $180 was appointed vice president-finance of aviation medicine, fleet liaison, contin­ formances at the Greek Cultural Center in million. Time, Inc. in New York. Prior to this new gency response, quality assurance. He will Springfield, MA last May. DR. ROBERT STREISAND now has appointment, Thayer had been treasurer be director of clinical services. His ad­ Closer to home, RAY EGAN writes that two children at Trinity. His son is in the and a vice president with Time since 1982. dress: Box 18-2991. FPO New York, New he became president of the Mead Johnson Class of 1985 and his daughter is in the Before that he had held major financial York 09540. Company as of last January 1st, and we Class of 1987. posts at the corporate level and in the com­ TOM SNEDEKER graduated from the also hear from TOM GLENDINNING that Class Agent: Rev. Michael A. pany's video businesses. executive M.B.A. program of the Tulane he is president of Green Glen, L.T.D. in Schulenberg FRED BORN has been named vice pres­ Graduate School of Business in New Or­ Pittsboro, NC. Greel) Glen is a newly ident-property management with Carlisle leans. He writes: "Great to have M.B.A. formed company which manufactures compost for landscaping and also markets An article in the April 1984 issue of Pri­ are glad to be bacl< in the U.S.A. They DR. JOSEPH CONNORS writes, "I am composting toilets. vate Property describes BILL FOX's very make their home at 540 South 116th well and thriving in Canada, having suc­ MICHAEL BLEY tells us that he was successful real estate business. He is pres­ Street, Omaha, NE 68154 . cessfully moved to a new country, raised recently named director of marketing for ident of Fox and Lozo, Inc. Realtors, the MICHAEL RICHMOND was promoted two boys to five and three. and seen my UCLA's extension division in Los Ange­ largest real estate firm in the Delaware to operations research manager at Hall­ marriage to Maria into its ninth year. I les, Michael is living at 462 North Harper Valley, with 23 offices in New Jersey and mark Cards in February, 1984. would like to hear from any Class of '69 Street in Los Angeles, 90048. Pennsylvania. Last year company sales LAWRENCE ROBERTS has been classmates who make it to the North­ Also recently promoted was BOB were $312 million, $100 million over the named dean of students at Kingswood­ west." COOLEY. Bob is now senior vice presi­ year before. Oxford School in West Hartford. Law­ MARK DIBONA writes that he and his dent and manager of the trrrst operations For those who feel I left you out, you're rence has taught English, coached and wife are looking forward to spending their division at the Mercantile National Bank right! My nine-year-old daughter got a hold counseled at Kingswood-Oxford since summer at their new house on Merrymeet­ in Dallas. of my Repo1·ter file containing all of Jast 1980. He and his six-year-old daughter, ing Lake, NH with their two children, Eliz-­ We also hear that BILL WHARTON is issue's notes. Consequently, no notes. If Erin, live at 25 High Street, Collinsville. abeth (4) and Doria (2) . They welcome any currently teaching music at Chesapeake each of you could find it in your heart to BILL STANLEY and his wife, Viola, and Delta Phi alumni who might be in the area. College in Maryland and is developing a forward duplicate information, I would be children. Karl and Jessica, make their WILLIAM ELLIOT is president of Davis new curriculum in computer music. happy to include your ''goodies" in the next home at 14 Randolph Place, Ridgewood, H. Elliot Co., Inc., an electrical contract­ As reported previously, BEN TRIB­ issue. NJ 07450. ing firm. His third child, William Elliot, KEN has added a new boat to his charter Bye for now! Class Agent: Richard P. Morris was born March 8, 1984 (see Births). fishing business and is eager to show class­ Class Agent: Roger K. Derderian TIMOTHY HARWOOD has been named mates the advantages of sport fishing! Ben a senior vice president at Fleet Real Es­ has also been named exclusive New Eng­ tate, Inc. in Providence. RI. He is respon­ land sales representative for the Rybo Frederick A. Vyn sible for the company's lending activities Runner Company, a boat manufacturer. Edward F. George, Jr. 19 Shoreham Club Rd. in the national markets. You can reach Ben at 44 Scranton Avenue 19 Eastern Ave. 6 9 Old Greenwich, CT 06870 ROBE JOHNSON is president oJ St. in Falmouth, MA 02540. 68 Arlington, MA 0217 4 Clair Steel Company in Northbrook, IL. I hope all of you have enjoyed a pleasant DAVID BARTLETT, former executive DONALD KRAUS is Bible editor for summer. While you are reading the col­ JERRY BROWN, the owner of his own editor at Metromedia television news in Oxford University Press in New York, NY. umn, why not sit down and drbp me a note business. St. Croix Kits. 423 South Main Washington, D.C., has been named deputy STEPHEN LUNDEEN is associate pro­ and let me know what is happening with Street, Stillwater, MN. states that he spent program director for news and English fessor of physics at the University of Notre you. the spring teaching hammock-weaving broadcasts at the Voice of America. In his Dame in South Bend. IN. Class Agent: Mason G. Ross classes in the park by the St. Croix River new position, David will supet·vise 350 em­ DICK SHARPLES and his wife, Vir­ (Minnesota). ployees responsible for V.O.A.'s central ginia, are the proud parents of a daughter, DAVID CHANIN announces his en­ news and current affairs product and all of Allison Virginia, who arrived on 6119/83 gagement to Dot·een Saar. He currently its broadcasts in the English language. (Father's Day). Dick is manager of the Robert E. Brickley lives at 4908 Monument Road, Philadel­ Jill and WILLIAM BEYER are still in marketing department for Texas Crude, 20 Banbury Ln. phia. PA 19131. and is an attorney with New Hampshire where he is the adminis­ Inc. 67 West Hartford, CT 06107 Derhel·t, Price and Rhoads of Philadel­ trator of the Concord Clinic. He was re­ FRED STROOCK is an administrative phia. cently elected president of the New analyst for U.C.L.A. in Los Angeles, CA . I hope all of you are having a pleasant RICHARD ENCK announces his 1981 Hampshire Medical Group Management Class Agent: W. Frederick and prosperous summer! On the news marriage to June C. Dilvigi, and the sub­ Association. Uehlein, Esq. front, BILL BLOCK has recently been sequent births of Alexandra on June 11, named director of operations for the To­ 1982 and Jarrett on November 9, 1983. ledo Blade in Toledo, OH. Bill adds as well GEORGE FELDMAN was appointed that he and his family are in the process of assistant professor of medicine at the Hos­ developing a home version of a string pital of University of Pennsylvania. Here­ FUNDRAISING GLOSSARY quartet including two of his three daugh­ sides at 2607 Darby Road, Havertown, PA 40 ters. That in itself could be interesting 19083. CHALLENGE The task Trinity College faces news for the Bla.de. Also along family lines, LEE M. "SKIP" FERRY, .JR. has been annually in raising the $4,100 JESSIE BREWER reports the birth of his named director of Community Soup daughter, Rebecca, in Tokyo on May 4, Kitchen, Inc. at 84 Broadway, New Ha­ per student needed to coyer the 1983 (see Births),"while I was on sabbati­ ven. difference between the cost of a cal leave in Switzerland and Japan." Nice PETER GREEJ\TE has a new position as Trinity education and the in­ work, Jessie. the presidenUchief executive officer of Trinity's answer to "Entertainment To­ Scali, McCabe. Sloves, Ltd. of Toronto. He come received from tuition and night" comes from KEVIN DAILY who lives at 1132 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario, fees. reports that he starred opposite Andrea Canada MSS 2B4. McCardle in a production of "They're WALT HARRISON was recently pro­ DEVELOPMENT As in the Development Office Playing our Song" at the Bucks County moted to director of college relations at Playhouse in New Hope, PA. I wonder how Colorado College. He adds that in Decem­ at Trinity College. Synonym for Andrea enjoyed herself? On a less enter­ ber, he spent a weekend with Marion and fundraising- an honorable, es­ taining note, RICK LUDWIG reports his EMIL ANGELICA in Minneapolis. Emil sential and farsighted en­ appointment as executive officer, fighter is now the executive director of the Min­ squadron 21, headquartered in Virginia nesota Association of Retarded Citizens. deavor. Beach, VA. I wonder if Rick still has a while Marion is the director of the Twin crew cut? Cities Fine Arts Council. DONOR One whose gifts help the Col­ BOB MOSS reports that he will be mov­ BEN HARVEY announces his May, lege maintain excellence and to ing to Phillips Academy in August where 1982 marriage to Josephine Go. Ben works respond to new opportunities. he will be teaching French and coaching for the Bank of America as a regional EDP crew. Congratulations, Bob! TOM RI­ auditor, Asia Division, in Manila, Phillip­ UNRESTRICTED One that may be used by the PLEY writes from Brussels that he and pines. PETER KAUFMANN convene every BRUCE E . JOHNSON announces his GIFT College to meet its needs as it month in Cambridge, England to remin­ engagement to Deborah Rogers on De­ sees fit. A most valuable kind of isce over a squash game or two. ALAN cember 24, 1983. WEINSTEIN dropped us a note to advise On April 6. 1984, Jeanne and JOE Mc­ gift, and the one Trinity hopes the Reporter that he had been elected fel­ KEIGUE hosted a party for a Trinity Class you will make today. low of the American College of Physicians. of '68 crowd, including GEORGE FOS­ JIM PURDY dropped us a line to an­ QUE, STU EDELMAN, DAN GOLD­ FUND YEAR The period from November 1st nounce the birth of Kathryn Hughes Purdy BERG, TOM NARY, BEN JAFFEE. and to May 31st when the Annual in January of 1983, and to advise us that JOHN VAIL. he had become rector of St. Johns Parish FRANKLIN H. :MOORE is the new as­ Alumni Fund is condu'cted. Church of Beverly Farms. MA following sistant headmaster for external affairs at ten years serving as rector of St. Ber­ The Gunnery School in Washington, CT. SATISFACTION The pleasure felt by donors who nard's Parish in Bernardsville, NJ. Best RALPH C. OSER, ESQ. has been re­ know they have helped Trinity wishes to Jim. BILL WEST is holding elected to the board of directors, Washing­ down the title of senior vice president/le­ ton International Trade Association, and continue its tradition of educat­ gal affairs of the multi-corporate hospital is currently serving as legal counsel to the ing young men and women. system making up St. Luke's Hospital in board. He was recently invited to speak on Shaker Heights, OH. Go for it, Jim! JACK special legal considerations in exporting THE TRINITY COLLEGE ALUMNI FUND CURTIS was highlighted recently in a fea­ services at a two-day conference spon­ ture article for The American LaunJe'r, sored by Coopers & Lybrand and the Com­ For information, please call: March, 1984 edition entitled, "Trying to merce Department on Export Trading. 203/527-3151 Corner the ESOP Market." Jack and his BOB PINE, presently a vice president partner were cited for the excellent work of finance for HDR, Inc., was transferred Frank Sherman or Anne Tolley Rotondo done by their professional corporation in to Nebraska in November. He adds that San Francisco. after ten years, he and his wife, Pascale, be the field. DAN REIFSNYDER took a John L. Bonee III position in the Department of State in the 50 State St. Bureau of Oceans and International Envi­ 7 0 Hartford, CT 06103 Headliner ronmental and Scientific Affairs. GARY SMITH is working for NASA on the space ERIC AASEN has ju<;t been promoted telescope in western Connecticut. MIKE to the position of vice president with Im· Philip Khoury '71 is author of Ur­ SOOLEY has been promoted to director perial Securities Corporation in San Fran· ban Notables and Arab Nationalism: of computing services at Mendocino Col­ cisco. In January of this year he had a son, The Politics of Damascus 1860-1920, lege in California. Darren Foster (see Births). In the field of medicine RONET1'E KO­ DAVE AGERTON and his wife, Mal­ published by Cambridge University Press (1983). A member of the his­ LOTKIN has been named director of a pro­ lory, had a son, Mark Joseph, in April (see gram dealing with the intensive treatment Births). They are living in Houston, TX. tory faculty at MIT, he was awarded of obesity that is affiliated with the Duke MEGAN O'NEILL '73 has written to us the Class of 1922 Career Develop­ University Medical Center. NORM JO­ that Jack Anderson attended her Febru­ ment Chair for excellence in teach­ HANSON has begun as a surgeon at the ary 4, 1984 wedding in Hartford. ing and scholarship and for service Cornell Medical Center in New York. STEVE BUSH is currently director of to the institution. TOM MACKENZIE is now an assistant laboratories in Joshua Tree, CA. He is a professor of medicine at Eastern Virginia physician there and has had a daughter, Medical School and is also director of he­ Danielle Marie, as of January of this year modialysis at Hampton, V. A. Medical (see Births). Center. DAVID NICHOLS has started a ALEX BELIDA, correspondent for the private mental health clinic in Racine, WI Voice of America, found himself at the sentative of A.G. Becker Incorporated in Case Western Reserve University in and is doing quite well with the venture. Winter Olympic Games in Sarajevo, Yu­ Chicago, IL. His daughter, Katherine Cor­ Cleveland, OH. If science fails, you can contact GRE­ goslavia this past winter. Unfortunately, nell Lennox, was born in April of 1983 (see DR. WARD GODSALL is finishing a fel­ GORY SAMMONS, who is a minister out­ he had to leave before the Games ended Bir·ths). lowship in endocrinology and going into side of Detroit. If that fails, contact RORY because of the death of Soviet leader Yuri ROY McCORD is currently with VTl, practice in Cheshire. CAMERON, who has just become a circuit Anc\ropov in order to report on his funeral Inc. of Fountain Valley, CA. PETER G. HUIDEKOPER, JR. has had judge in Chippewa County, WI. If that and the choice of Konstantin Chernenko BILL MILLARD was recently elected essays published recently in Newsweek and fails, JOHN HEPPE is offering catamaran as his successor. His general reporting re­ to the board of directors of the Television Christian Science Monitor, and is complet­ sailing lessons off the coast of New Jersey. sponsibilities include the Soviet Union, Theater Company in New York. ing a novel. HERMAN ASARNOW has been ap­ East and West Germany as well as east­ WALT MOODY reports that he still WILLIAM LAPLANTE I1 writes that pointed chairman of the English depart­ west conferences held in Europe on such can't beat BARRY BEDRICK '68 to the his business, Media Alliance, involving tel­ ment at the University of Portland. matters as disarmament. He was in Stock­ bottom of Aspen Mountain. However, evision consultation and talent. is expand­ In the arts STEVE GYLLENHAAL has holm earlier this year to report on the Barry also holds the record for number of ing. His daughter, Lauren, is now two just finished writing a feature film for Co­ opening of the 35-nation conference on poles and walkman destroyed in one day. years old. lumbia Pictures, entitled The New Kids. confidence and security building measures Your SECRETARY, having returned to BILL OVERTREE is still a foster par­ PETER GRIESINGER has been produc­ and disarmament in Europe. He and his Aspen and Snow-mass this past February, ent and involved with Big Brothers. He ing and directing films in West Virginia. wife, Patricia Reber, had their second son not having received his report from Walt, writes, "The kids are still trying to drive Back in Hartford, WOOLSEY JOHNSON this spring, Brian Reber Belida (see kept a lookout only for such mundane ter­ me nuts!" is working on a project that involves turn­ Births). I'Ors as hypothermia, high altitude sun­ WILLIAM REYNOLDS reports, "Have ing 20 tons of scrap metal into various burn, deep powder boles and avalanche. successfully opened fast food units in Dal­ sculptures that will be exhibited around THE REV. ROBERT W. DUNCAN, JR. Little did he realize what dangers really las under the name 'Chicken George,' am has reported that at the 199th convention the city. lurk among the Colorado slopes! building apartments in Louisiana, Florida OLIVIA HENRY is still a treatment co­ of the Diocese of Delaware, he was elected BILL MUDEN has two children now, and Connecticut, and am 'single and not a deputy to the general convention of the ordinator at the Youth Development Cen­ Elena Dorothea, born in April of 1981, and ready to mingle.' " ter in Manchester, NH, the state's facility Episcopal Church, by 20 years the young­ Hans Richard, born in September of 1983. LOUISE RISKIN is directing Art/Medi­ est member of the delegation. for juvenile delinquents. She counsels, su­ 41 DAN REILERT awaits his second child cine, Inc., a non-profit organization which pervises staff and plans programs. Her in­ An article in Town & Country of May, in late May of 1984. she founded to facilitate the clinical use of !984 mentioned CHARLIE FENWICK's terests outside of work include lots of DAVID SADAYASU is living in Fort the arts. sports, photography, travel, reading and accomplishments in steeplechasing at last Worth, TX. He is the export manager for TOM SASALI has been promoted to year's Maryland Hunt Cup. Apparently a gardening. A & A International there. manager, financial and planning and con­ ROCCO MAFFEI, JR. is a partner in woman jockey was unable to ride her STEVE TODY has purchased a new trol, for Burroughs Corporation com­ champion steed, "Cancottage," because of the law firm of Hart and Bruner, P.A. in home in Woodbridge, VA. He is the ADP ponent evaluation and procurement Minneapolis, MN. a bad fall in a race the week before. As a plans officer for the Navy Department in organization in Carlsbad, CA. triple-time winner of the Maryland Hunt Washington, D.C. His title is chief of naval CHUCK SHOUSE is vice president of Class Agent: Harvey Dann IV Cup and the winner of the 1980 Grand Na­ operations (OP-11) and he received his M.S. Blunt Mortuary, Inc. in Colorado Springs, tional Steeplechase at Aintree, England, degree in information systems from the co. Kenneth M. Stone one of only two Americans ever to have Naval Post Graduate School in Monterey, LOU SLOCUM was recently promoted won the event, he was chosen to replace 2221 Empress Dr. CAin May of 1982. from vice president of marketing to assist­ St. Louis, MO 63136 her and to wear the fallen woman jockey's BILL PEELLE has announced that he ant to the president of Tekna, Inc. He will 73 colors, pink silks with cerise hearts! Char­ has joined the firm of Moseley, Hallgarten, be involved with corporate financial mat­ SANDRA YURCHYK ARCHER is an lie came in first. It was his 60th steeple­ Estabrook & Weeden, Inc. of Hartford as ters, foreign manufacturing operations and chase victory, leaving him only five behind assistant professor in the department of an investment broker. distribution. He has just completed his first orthodontics at the University of Mary­ the all-time leading amateur jockey, Lewis worldwide trip to Tokyo, Hong Kong, Zu­ Class Agent: Ernest J. Mattei, Esq. land in Baltimore. "Paddy" Neilson III. A'3 an amateur, rich and Dusseldorf - then back to San Charlie received no remuneration for his STEVEN BARKAN and his wife, Dr. Francisco. All in 14 days! Barbara Tennent, are expecting their sec­ conquest. In his other life, he is an invest­ DR. TIMOTHY WOOLSEY is associate ment banker who jogs five miles a day, and ond child in July. Steve's dissertation is Susan Haberlandt professor of piano at Southwest Texas being published by Rutgers University a descendant of a long line of fox hunters State University. He did an 11-concert tour and steeplechasers. His wife, the former 34 Cherryfield Dr. Press. West Hartford, CT 06107 this past winter and writes that he is en­ VIRGINIA FABBRI BUTERA has co­ Anne Stewart, has a "similar ancestry and 71 joying life in Texas. a similar passion for steeplechasing." organized an exhibition entitled, The Fold­ MARK ALDRICH recently formed and Class Agent: Thomas R. DiBenedetto ing Image: Screens by Western Artists of DAVE GOLDBERG operates a custom is chairman of Lifescale Technologies, Inc. the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, book bindery. He has married Carlen Finn This firm will develop and market a series for the National Gallery of Art, Washing­ as of August, 1982 and has had a daughter of patented electronic medical devices. ton, D.C. (March-September, 1984) and as of July of 1983 named Molly Anne Gold­ DAVID CASEY, JR. is president of San G. Harvey Zendt Yale University Art Gallery (October, berg. Diego Trial Lawyers. In addition, he is also 123 Upland Ter. 1984-January, 1985). Ginny, who devel­ JOEL GREENSPAN is currently a president of the Friendly Sons of St. Pa­ 72 BaJa Cynwyd, P A 19004 oped the idea for the exhibition six years medical epidemiologist with the U.S. Pub­ trick. ago while working at the Philadelphia Mu­ lic Health Service. He is stationed at the A review which BRUCE COLMAN BYRON SMITH has achieved the dis­ seum of Art, has co-authored the cata­ Hawaii Department of Health in Honolulu. wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle on tinction of associate in the Casualty Actu­ logue. She is currently working toward her BARBARA JANSON (nee Barbara Edward Abbey's Down the River has been arial Society, while working for the Horace Ph.D. in art history at the City University Shallenberger) is the director of publica­ reprinted in Readings for Writing, edited Mann Insurance Company of Springfield, of New York. tions at the American Math Society in by Elizabeth Cowen. Meeting the Expecta­ IL. Other grads of note in the business In addition to his duties as assistant head Providence, Rl. She has also received her tions of the Land, which he co-edited with world include PETER BLUM, who is a of the Yale University Music Library, VIC M.B.A. from the University of Rhode Is­ Wes Jackson and Wendell Berry, will be vice president at Salomon Brothers in Bos­ CARDELL bas just been appointed edito­ land. published by North Point Press in Janu­ ton and BILL FISHER, who holds the rial coordinator of the Charles I ves Soci­ ary, 1985. same title at Wheat First Securities Inc. in ety. BILL LAWRENCE will be graduating DOM FRANCO's occupations include Winston Salem, NC. Congratulations are On March 24th, JEFFREY HARRIS in August of this year with an M.B.A. from photography, apartment house managing, due for "FACTS" F ASS who just received married Susan Cutler. Last year he was Pepperdine University having been en­ and martial arts instruction. his M.B .A. from Drexel University, while made a partner in the Cincinnati, OH Jaw rolled in a "presidents and key execu­ DR. ROBERT GARRETT will complete working and fathering two children. firm of Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur. tives" program. his residency in family medicine and then If the latest notes are any indication of RAY FAHRNER was commissioned to SCOTT LENNOX is a registered repre- begin a fellowship in family medicine at what our class is doing, science seems to write and perform his orchestra piece, Vi- sions and Fantasies, by the Lima, OH James A. Finkelstein formation services with Westmoreland ROY GRIMM is senior consultant at Symphony Orchestra. He has been nomi­ c/o The Wyatt Company Coal Co. in Valley Forge, PA. Conning & Co. in Hartford. nated for a Pulitzer Prize in music compo­ Suite 220 MICHAEL MINARD writes, "About ANN TULCIN KATES, her husband sition. 3366 North Torrey Pines Ct. two years ago I crossed Manhattan to write Dave, daughter Erica (3), and son Doug DAVID JONES is an F-18 pilot for the 74 La Jolla, CA 92037 and roll for Benton & Bowles, famous for (10 months), are living at Eagle Hill School U.S. Navy, stationed at NAS LeMoore, Crest advertising, notorious for 'Don't where Dave is employed and working as CA. His daughter, Jerilyn, is a year old. SUSAN JACOBSON BEACH and her squeeze the Charmin' Whipple-dramas. an educational supervisor and athletic di­ SUSAN MEAD is an attorney in Dallas, husband are expecting their third child in Between idea-ating for Entenmann's, rector. TX. July. Pepto-Bismol, Marine Midland Bank, Har­ PETER KILIAN! has just bought a new IRA MOWITZ has won first prize in the LISBETH BENSLEY-FINO has been dee's fast food and what-have-you I hum house. He writes, "Any Trin alumni that International Electroacoustic Music Com­ married for a year to Stephen Pino. Hendrix singing Dylan saying 'There must need a place to stay while in Philadelphia petition in Bourges, France for his com­ An April issue of the Hartford Cow·ant be some kind of way out of here.' " are welcome anytime- just call." puter piece "A Ia Memoire d'un Ami." His outlines Hartford's deputy mayor, FRANK JAMES MORGAN is a resident physi­ LINDA LANDON is "very busy devel­ wife, Carol Armstrong, has just been ap­ BORGES's rise to power. Described as the cian in internal medicine at Vanderbilt oping a career as shiatsu/massage thera­ pointed to the faculty of the art history most powerful politician in City Hall, University Hospital in Nashville, TN. He pist, while supporting myself as a word­ department at U.C., Berkeley. They ex­ Frank could become "one of the best lead­ plans to return to Connecticut in July of processing operator." Linda lives in New pect to move to California in August. ers this city has had." according to City 1985. He and his wife, REBECCA MOR­ York City. DR. WILLIAM NEALON has just com­ Manager Woodrow Wilson Gaitor. GAN '75, announce the birth of a daugh­ RUDY MONTGELAS is engineering pleted a year as chief resident in surgery DEBBIE ROOT CARLEY writes from ter, Eliza Rivkah Morgan, born on manager at Switchcraft, Inc. in Chicago, at NYU-Bellevue Medical Center and plans New Hampshire hoping all had a happy February 28, 1984. IL. to spend a year in surgical research in Gal­ lOth Reunion. Debbie is busy with daugh­ LISA CAROTHERS MORGAN reports JESSE MORGAN III is expecting a new veston, TX beginning in August, 1984. ters Sarah (age 7) and Ann (age 3) and is that daughter, Caitlin Carothers Morgan, baby in November, 1984. He was pro­ NICHOLAS READ is an attorney with planning for a two-week trip to Spain. was born on November 4, 1983 "in a bir­ moted to New England sales manager in Craig & Macauley in Cambridge, MA. He Husband CHRIS '73 maintains an archi­ thing room with music therapy assisted January, 1984. His wife, Michelle, has been reports the arrival of a daughter, (see tecture practice in Concord, NH and also childbirth." a tenured faculty member at Amherst Col­ Birth-9). . commutes daily to a firm in Boston, MA. STEVEN NEWSOME is now the cura­ lege since January, 1984. DAVID ROOCHNIK is an assistant pro­ JAMES FINKELSTEIN writes from his tor of the Vivian G. Harsh Collection of REBECCA MORGAN is a law clerk at fessor of philosophy at Iowa State Univer­ home in Solana Beach, CA, "It was a sur­ Afro-American History and Literature at the U.S. Federal District Court in Nash­ sity in Ames. prise to get an invitation to a 12th Anni­ Chicago Public Library's Woodson Re­ ville, TN. She and her husband announce JOHN SHORTELL was recently pro­ versaJ·y Dinner for Trinity Big Brothers/ gional Library. The Harsh Collection is the the birth of Eliza Rivkah on February 28, moted to president of Grubb Lumber Com­ Big Sisters. It doesn't seem so long ago largest collection of Afro-Americana in the 1984. pany in Wilmington, DE. He writes that that I was involved in starting it all! Need­ Midwest and is the second largest such col­ CONSTANCE PEMMERL of Reho­ his wife, Carolyn, and six year old twins, less to say, I am pleased that the move­ lection housed in a public library nation­ both, MA has been named vice president Joe and Kelly, are fine. ment still grows stronger and stronger wide. at Fleet Real Estate. GEORGE SUTHERLAND won the Tri­ every day ... the need certainly does." DR. RICHARD A. NORDEN began MARK SAMMONS spent the summer at bury Prince Tennis Tourney in April in R. CURTIS JORDAN III is still Jiving in work at the New York Eye & Ear Infir­ the Attingham Summer School in England Southbury. Hopewell, NJ, just outside of Princeton, mary in July where he has been selected studying English art, architecture and HERBERT SYMMES is working on an where he coaches women's varsity crew. as a fellow in cornea and external disease. landscape gardening history (concentrat­ M.B.A . in computer application at Rens­ He is married to Georgia Smith Jordan ELLEN RUTH STEVENS is an accoun­ ing on the 18th century). selaer Polytechnic Institute. and they have a son, James Andrew Jor­ tant with the Utah State Board of Re­ RICK TUCCI has been named to the ERIC WINTER is employed by Stone & dan. gents. board of directors of the Small Business Webster Engineering Corporation in DAVID DUENNEBIER is broadcast JANE VEITH is an assistant professor Foundation of America, Inc. Baker, LA. operation programmer at E.S.P .N. Sports at Washington State University in Pull­ NANCY SARGON ZARSKY is execu­ ANDREW WOLF of New Haven has Network and reports the birth of Nicole man. tive director of Adult Day Center, Inc. in been accepted to Harvard University's Moira on September 7. 1983. RICHARD WOLFRAM is a member of Framingham, MA . She was married to John F. Kennedy School of Government's WILLIAM LAWSON is an attorney liv­ the Fordham Law School Class of 1985 Norman I. Zarsky on December 26, 1983. 42 Lucius N. Littauer Program in Public ing in Honolulu, HI. and has been employed at the New York Class Agent: Benjamin Brewster Administration for 1984-85. The mid­ DOROTHY McADOO MACCOLL and firm of Whitman and Ransom as a summer career program at the Kennedy School is her husband live in Ardmore with their associate. an intensive, nine-month degree program three children - two boys and one girl, ROBERT ZICCARDI currently prac­ A. Hobart Porter for elected, appointed and career public ages 6, 3 and 2. Her husband, Malcolm, is tices dentistry in Montclair, NJ. He and 10 West 66th St. service professionals from throughout the a vice president at the First Boston Corp. his wife have three children - Christo­ Apartment 12C world . and she is coaching squash and lacrosse at pher, who is three years old, and twins 76 New York, NY 10023 Class Agent: Stanley A. Twardy, Jr., The Shipley School. Andrew and Emily born October 7, 1983. Esq. SCOTT McBRIDE is a consultant in in- Class Agent: Karen Tucker TIM SUTTON writes that he's a weights and measures investigator for the state of Minnesota where he, 2lovely children, and Gary Morgans a very lovely wife live "where the prairie Area Association A ctivities 638 Independence Ave. S.E. meets the sky." As one who lives where 75 Washington, D.C. 20003 the skyscrapers meet the smog, that sounded pretty good. Others from our crew BOSTON - President James P. Whitters, III '62, Tel: (617) 426-4600 NICK BENSLEY is studying for his have fled the East Coast as well, including On June 1st, a well attended reception for the Classes of '80-'83 was held at the home of master's in architecture in Denver, CO. CHERYL CERNAK FOLSTAD who is a Mike Hurwitz '83. An Evening at the Boston Pops on June 15th was enjoyed by approx­ SELBOURNE BROWN writes crypti­ "Dr. of chiropractic" in Tomah, WI, and cally that "the second million was much MIKE O'BRIEN who works in L.A. for imately 50 alumni/ae, parents, and friends. easier than the first!" Hewtek Ventures. BOB PURCELL is in CHARLIE CHARUVASTR received Minneapolis with General Mills, and in CAPE COD - Phyllis Mason hosted the 21st Annual Cape Cod Chowder Party on extensive training in the London insur­ Texas. LAURIE BROWN TRANCHIN is August 6th. Her magnificent home was a perfect setting for the successful affair. ance market. That training included visits working with husband/business partner, to Lloyd's Market as well as leading U.K. Rob, on a documentary film on the history HARTFORD - President Donald B. Reder '69, Tel: (203) 724-0861 insurance brokers. In addition to being of the Texas oil industry (October Produc­ marketing manager for state-owned insur­ tions, Inc.), while JAKE PATTERSON is A large group of alumni/ae, parents and friends attended the Club's second annual ance company in Thailand, he is also in completing his residency in orthopedic carillon concert/cookout at the College on August 15th. charge of oil and gas accounts. surgery in San Antonio. In Mississippi, DOUGLAS CLARK is owner/manager THE REV. SUSA.t'-1 CURTIS was or­ NORTHEASTERN OHIO - President Richard G. Mecaskey '51, Tel: (216) 371-3572 of Whole Foods Trading Company in Cody, dained an Episcopal priest on June 27, On August 26th, the home of Dick and Kathryn Mecaskey was the setting for a Picnic WY. 1984. Supper for incoming freshmen, undergraduates, alumni/ae and parents. CLIFFORD DEUTSCHMAN's educa­ Back East, but south. GINO BARRA is tional history is: M.S . in chemistry from an AVP with Balcor/ American Express in Northeastern University in 1976, M.D. Boca Raton, FL, and KAREN BLAKES­ NEW YORK- President Ann Knutson Waugh '80, Tel : (212) 410-4664 from New York Medical College in 1980, LEE reports she is a "laborer" for South­ The New York annual dinner was held at the Coho on June 12th. Ann Knutson Waugh resident in surgery at the University of ern Roof and Woodcare Corp. in Hilton was elected president. Florida 1980-81, resident in neurosurgery Head, SC. Climbing the coast, STE­ at the University of Minnesota 1981-83, PHANIE BORYK EVANCHO writes that PHILADELPHIA - President B. Graeme Frazier III '57. Tel: (215) 836-5682 fellow in critical care and trauma in the she works in Greenville, NC for East Car­ department of surgery at St. Paul-Ramsey olina University as secretary to the dean, On June 13th, the Annual Picnic for incoming freshmen from the Philadelphia area was Medical Center 1983. He will join the de­ and that she and husband Phil (who will be held at the home of Joseph Colen '61. The Eastburns (Bill '56, Page '84, and Bill '87) partment of anesthesia and critical medi­ the resident artist again for Pitt County hosted a party at their home on August 18th for undergraduates, alumni/ae, parents and cine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine by popular demand) are expecting a sec­ friends. in July, 1985. ond child this year. ALLEN GLATER is still employed as a Our nation's Capital (and vicinity) is the WASHINGTON, DC - President DanielL. Korengold '73, Tel: (202) 244-8634 small animal veterinarian on the north side locale of a few of our classmates including of Chicago. MARGIE JOHNSO -ORRICK, a data On June 15th, Charlie Ingersoll '83 and Dan Mikesell '83 hosted a very successful ROBERT GRIFFIN is chairman of the base analyst for Navigation Sciences in reception for the Classes of '80-'83. Rate Setting Commission in Boston, MA. Bethesda, and TOM KORENGOLD, who has learned of Ford's better idea from have recently opened a disco~nt shoe store firm of Shaw, Pittman. Potts & Straw­ investments in the United States. CHIP GOODE (now a Boston banker). in Orange. NJ. Rich will run that store bridge. His practice is primarily focused W. ROSS NEWLAND III and his wife "Koonhole" found time to visit NYC for while John opens a second in Massachu­ on the unique challenges involved with the left LaPaz last summer and are now enjoy­ his anniversary and the visit provided an setts. reorganization of insolvent companies and ing a two-year tour in Caracas where they excellent reunion opportunity for your GREGORY BURNS has been promoted with the organization and nurturing of in­ both work in the American Embassy for SECRETARY, JIM (Sol) SOLOMON (now to a regional sales manager with the Kim­ novative "start-up" companies. the Department of State. with Prince, not New Balance), PAULA ble Division of Owens Illinois and is now BRUCE WESSEL graduated from Yale PETER PRESTON is an instructor of and GENE SHEN (Gene now with Whit­ living in the suburbs of Chicago. Law School in May. He will be clerking for computer science and mathematics at ney McRae Inc., not Citibank), CARLYLE GIL CHILDERS works at the District United States District Court Judge Ed­ North Idaho College in Coew· d'Alene, ID. FRASER, CHARLIE COHN, EADS Attorney's office in Brooklyn, NY. ward Rafeedie in Los Angeles starting this DURANT SCHWIMMER has been ap­ JOHNSON (whose better half, Peggy, was Also in New York, JAMES GILLESPIE fall. pointed assistant treasurer at the Green­ tending junior and was missed by all) and is manager of broadcast advertising for Class Agents: Cynthia Mohr wich office of Union Trust. various dates and spouses. NBC-TV, and he asks, ''MALCOLM Andrew H. Friedman BRIAN THOMAS completed his M.B.A. Other news is in from KIMBALL KIRBY '76, STEVE SWIATKIEWICZ '76 at New York University and has started JONAS who's working on a master's in and RICHARD RUCHMAN '76- Where as a financial analyst with Kenner Prod­ mathematics at U. Va. and FREDDIE are you?'~ ucts in Cincinnati, OH. MILLER DAVIS who is a financial plan­ ED GLASSMAN writes that he is "still Gretchen A. Mathieu-Hansen Class Agent: Durant D. Schwimmer ner for Pru-Bache Securities in Charles­ working on his Ph.D. in clinical psychol­ c/o John F. Smith ton, WV and mother of Frederica Morgan ogy" at York University in Toronto, On­ 8800 Montgomery Ave. Davis (2/17/84) (see Births). In Chatham, tario. 78 Wyndmoor, PA 19118 Michael Tinati NJ, ANN CHESNES is a senior invest­ JONATHAN and PHILIPPA BU­ 153 E. 85th St. Apt. 2 ment analyst with Charter Security Life HA YAR GOODWIN '78 have just moved BOB BECHERER is owner/manager of 7 9 New York, NY 10028 Insurance Co. and she married Christo­ to Atlanta from the Dallas area. Their chil­ Becherer's Jewelry in Lincoln, IL. pher Quinn on 3/31184. At Princeton dren are Geoffrey Lawrence (18 mos.) and LESLIE HENDERSON BECK is an in­ There weren't any dramatic changes. Gamma Tech, MATTHEW CAHN is pro­ Michael Alexander (4 years). Jonathan is vestment executive with Prudential-Bache Everyone looked like their Ivy pictures. gramming analyzers for electron micro­ in his sixth year with IBM and Philippa has in Houston, TX. Oh, there were bulges peeking over some scopes (a far cry from the flute) and he her own business. She does free-lance ELIZABETH CARABALLO has com­ belts and wispy hairs where thick thatches writes that he sold the orange '65 Mustang graphic design work out of he1· home. pleted her first semester at Boston U ni­ grew, but, overall, we've remained well in April. From Philadelphia, HADLEY DR. LAURIE GRAUEL has finished her versity School of Public Health, where preserved. So, to those of you who were JONES FERGUSON writes that she's a residency in pediatrics and is now in pri­ she's working on her master's full-time. unable to attend our 5th Reunion. no need full-time "Mom" (with Kyle almost 1 and vate practice in Rehoboth, MA. She writes, "Come July, I'll be a brides­ to worry, we're coping well. Katie 4) and that husband, Dick, is with MEREDITH MAIN HARDT GRAVES maid for BARBARA WOLF, here in Near a third of our class came and went Dechert Price and Rhoads. and husband .JAMES GRAVES are enjoy­ Brookline, MA." during the weekend - some remained on PETER HANSEN worked in TV on a ing their house on Long Island. They ART CHAMPAGNE is a physics in­ campus for the full three days, while many special to be aired next year, before he moved in last May. They write that they structor at Princeton University. arrived just for one. The focal point, the vacationed in Jamaica in May. From Bed­ recently attended the wedding of PETER MICHAEL COHEN is field marketing highlight of the weekend had to be Satur­ ford, NY, LIZ SIENER RAHO checks in SPIELMAN '76 and Liz Wong in Wil­ manager for Jerrico in Pittsburgh, PA. day's softball game. The dinners were with news of daughter. Virginia Hodges, liamsburg, VA. Also in attendance were MALCOLM DANIEL "~ll be a graduate swell and the entertainment delightful, but born 3/10/84 (see Births). LYMAN DELANO '75 and his wife Diana, student in art history at Princeton in Sep­ the game on the Quad probably conjured To the far northeast, TRIP SINNOTT and DREW TAMONEY. tember. more memories and rekindled the senti­ writes of a two-week visit to Israel and JOHN GRIGLUN is in graduate school J.K. DOLDOORIAN. JR. is director of mentality we all expected to feel. adds that he's continuing his editing and at Baldwin Wallace College in Berea, OH. athletics and head football coach at Oxford DON SILK's driving grab down the line, Christian ministry in Topsham, ME. Also, THOMAS HESLIN, JR. received a suc­ High School in Massachusetts. DON MALONEY's blistering throws from WILLIAM BOLSTER is headed for a cessful kidney transplant in October, 1983. WILLIAM DOW, JR. writes, "In the third, BARB KARLEN anchoring second, Ph.D. (master's already completed in his­ He writes, "The new Mather addition is midst of rowhouse renovations in Philadel­ "RAFF" ranging in left, DEBBIE KUN­ tory at Brown, but he continues to sail and great." phia Art Museum area, dirty work. If any­ HARDT racing out those singles - it was is headed to Newfoundland as chief mate DEBORAH WILSON BOULT reports one has a hammer, feel free to drop by. a sepia-toned picture that had been re­ 43 on R/V Westward this summer ('84). From the sad news that Touissant, the 20 lb. Job-wise, the building industry is very trieved from the attic and dusted. Boston, MARK "Ex" ECKMAN writes black cat from the '76-'77 French Dorm, busy." As for changes in our lives, there are that he is starting a fellowship at Tufts in has died. STEPHEN ELSAESSER graduated many to report. clinical decision-making at New England CHRISTOPHER JEPSON has just com­ from law school in May and took the bar DEBBIE KUNHARDT has forsaken Medical Center. pleted his Ph.D. in social psychology at the exam in July. He planned to spend two spread-sheets for bedsheets and economic Last but not least is our news from Con­ University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and weeks in England. barometers for thermometers. Debbie ha.q necticut. DR. DAVID MERIWETHER will be starting a two-year research fellow­ JAMES ESSEY is manager of external moved in with JULIE ROGERS, who will take time out from residency in urol­ ship at Vanderbilt University in the fall . business development for Clairol. He is re­ works for the discount brokerage house of ogy and transplantation at Pitt to be mar­ MARTIN KANOFF is involved in in­ sponsible for acquisition and licensing Rose & Co., and will be attending the nurs­ ried to Karyn Ann Johnston at the Trinity vitro fertilization program at Kennedy agreements. ing school at Mass. General. TOM CHOL­ Chapel in August, 1984 (see Engage­ Memorial Hospital University Medical BARBARA FISCHER McQUEENEY is NOKY, recently transferred from Chicago ments). SALVADOR SENA is doing a Center. working as an advertising coordinator and to Hartford by Munich Re, "~ll be return­ postdoctoral fellowship in clinical chemis­ MARIAN KUHN has just moved to New assistant manager at Johnson and Dix Fuel ing to Chicago this fall to attend the Uni­ try at Hartford Hospital, and also in Hart­ York City from Boston. She 'viii be work­ Corp. in Vermont while her husband at­ versity of Chicago business program. ford, ELIZABETH SMITH is working for ing in international private banking at the tends Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of ANDY STORCH is controller at Merona American Airlines, and traveling and Chase Manhattan Bank. business administration. Sportswear in New York City. JOHN showing her horse in the area. CARLA DR. RICHARD LUPTON has com­ PHILIPP A BUHAYAR GOODWIN and RAFFERTY is an AVP at Manufacturers ROSATI is director of development at the pleted his residency in internal medicine in JONATHAN GOODWIN '77 have moved Hanover Trust in their V'lhite Plains office Old State House, and BERN1CE MEYER Madison, WI and is moving to Port Gibson, to Atlanta from the Dallas, TX area with and lives with his wife, Jennifer, in the SALTZMAN writes that she is a volunteer MS for his three year National Health their children Geoffrey. 18 months, and lovely nook of Newtown, CT. DON SILK for the Association of Parents of American Service obligation. Michael Alexander, 4 years. Jonathan is in is to be married this summer and has left Israelis (CT chapter president and editor JAMES PARKER has graduated from his sixth year with IBM and Philippa does the bachelor party details in the capable of its national publication), and she also is Boston University Medical School and will free-lance design work out of their home. hands of ABE MINTZ, who works at Chase a Bible student and square dancer. In New intern at Boston City Hospital. SCOTTE GORDON began study at Manhattan. BARBARA KARLEN BLIT­ Haven, SUE WEISSELBERG, an associ­ CLARK PATTESON and his wife De­ Brown University in June. STEIN and her husband, Mark, flew from ate with Evans and Baldwin, has been bra Reed were married on November 12, SUSAN IVERSEN notes that she is en­ Akron, OH to attend the reunion. They working on employment discrimination is­ 1983 in Woodside, CA where Debra was joying living in London where she is in the enjoy midwest Jiving and will probably re­ sues, among other things, and she was raised. HARRY GRAVES '78 flew out for department of design research at R.C.A. main there for the foreseeable future. AN­ named to the board of directors for the festivities. Clark has been living in Palo SUSAN KENNEDY received her mas­ DREW WALSH lives in Hartford and CWEALF (Connecticut Women's Educa­ Alto, CA for three years. He writes that ter's degree in educational administration writes for the Hartford Courant. Also in tional and Legal Fund). Also in New Ha­ he likes the climate and the "skiing is from Fordham University. She has a new attendance were EMILY LATOUR, ven, ROBERT GIBSON is a history great, too." job as dean of girls. KAREN EZEKIEL HANDMAKER, DON teacher at Hillhouse High School. MARC PEARLIN of Milford has been MICHAEL KLINGER works as a move­ MALONEY, ROY CHILDERS, who is en­ ED STAUDINGER will be chief resi­ promoted to assistant vice president at the ment therapist in Framingham, MA. He gaged to be married, and JEFF SEI­ dent in the Tulane General Surgery Resi­ People's Bank in Bridgeport. Marc is a also performs African dance, contact im­ BERT. dency in July. This is his last year. senior staff attorney in the bank's legal provisation. and drama in the Boston area. As for the news on the wire ... Class Agent: Thomas P. Santopietro department. THOMAS LENAHAN writes, "Kathy BARBARA BURDEN has taken part in MATTHEW QUIGLEY is a resident had a baby girl, Karen Kennedy Lenahan. the uncovering of a Bronze Age site at physician at Northwestern Memorial Hos­ Our first, Julie, is 21fz and she really loves Dover, an 18th century Dutch warship in pital in Chicago, IL. the big sister role. Will Trin ever have a the Solent and Roman sites off the Isle of George W. Jensen II DAVID fWSEN has accepted a new po­ girls' ice hockey team?" · Wight. 3 Englewood Ave., #11 sition, beginning in July, on the faculty at STEPHEN MILLER is a resident phy­ BETH BONBRIGHT works for Califor­ 77 Brookline, MA 02146 University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. sician at the Bowman Gray School of Med­ nia state senator Art Torres and enjoys MARK STERN is an account executive icine at North Carolina Baptist Hospital in her leisure hours with "rides through LISA BENSON and husband NICK '78 with Connecticut General Insurance Com­ Winston-Salem, NC. mountain country" on her horse. will be Jiving in Saudi Arabia for the next pany in New York City. ALEXANDER MOORREES is with HELEN CHAMBERLAND sells CAD/ two years. C. BOWDOIN TRAIN is practicing Jaw Drexel Burnham Lambert in Brussels, CAM systems for Racal- Reduc, Inc. RICH BURDGE and JOHN KITCHEN in Washington, D.C. at the 130-attorney Belgium advising European institutions on EILEEN CONDON works for Big Ap- pie Circus, a non-profit group (where else?) We've heard from some of the laywers ROBERT REYNOLDS is a block equity BRUCE JOHNSON, in his second year in the Big Apple. in our class: PAUL PIESZAK is an asso­ salestrader with Kidder Peabody in New at Emory Law School, is working for the JIM CROPSEY consults for Winterthur ciate at Moynihan, Ruskin in Waterbury; York City. He received his M.B.A. from summer as a law clerk with the Atlanta Insurance. SETH PRICE is an associate with Stokes, Darden Graduate School in 1983. Legal Aid Society. ANDY ESCOLL has begun his resi­ Shapiro, Fussell & Genberg in Atlanta; WILLIAM ROGERS III has been pro­ LYNNE JOHNSON is in the training dency in family medicine at the University JENNIFER SMALL is a summer associ­ moted to manager of Standard Program­ program at Shearson/American Express of Cincinnati. ate with Fried, Frank in D.C.; MICHAEL ming Languages Department. in New York City. MARION DEWITT has been trans­ PRESTON has joined the Baltimore firm STAPLEY WONHAM is an assistant WILLIAM KIEFFER is with the Wyatt ferred to Chicago by Chemical Bank. of Anderson, Coe & King. editor at This World magazine in New Company in Stamford. DOUG HALBERT has been promoted KATHA DID DEL WARREN is based in York City. CHRISTINE LABAN is attending grad­ to production manager at Hewlett Pack­ Hong Kong where she is president of Twin E. CARTER WURTS is an account ex­ uate school at the University of California ard; he married Michelle Nelson in Palo Panda Trading Co., an international and ecutive with Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner at Davis. Alto. China trade company designing, manufac­ & Smith in London. LEN LORTIE is a P.C. scheduler/super­ GARY SA VADOVE has been promoted turing and exporting original product lines Class Agent: Andrew M. Storch visor at the California Circuit Assembly in to sales planner, information and commu­ to the United States and Europe. "Visi­ Mt. View, CA. nication products for G.E. Gary lives in tors welcome," she says. PAMELA GERMAIN MATT began a Syracuse, NY. ANDREW ESCOLL has begun his resi­ summer clerkship program with Alcoa's ALISON STARKEY is a leasing agent dency in family medicine at the University · Charles A. Tiernan Ill, Esq. legal deparment in May. She plans to grad­ for Business Computer Systems Leasing, of Cincinnati. 7 Cypress Dr. uate in December from Duquesne Univer­ Inc. in Seattle. Alison writes that she keeps CORNELIA McLANE writes that 8 0 Branford, CT 06405 sity School of Law and take the February in touch with NINA WAINWRIGHT, who bridesmaids for her June wedding in­ bar exam. will be working for Lehman Brothers in cluded MEREDITH DIXON FINAN '77 GARY ABRAMSON will be spending the LARRY MATTISON is a sales repre­ institutional fixed income sales. and DEBORAH MEAGHER. summer with U.P.I. in Madrid. sentative with Corning Glass Works in Ra­ BILL EGAN is a resident in general sur­ THOMAS HARBECK is currently prod­ MAGGIE AFFELDER writes that she leigh, NC. gery at Upstate Medical Center in Syra­ uct manager for Atari Inc. in the video­ is actively pursuing an acting career in SARAH McCORMICK is with the Bank cuse. game, entertainment software area. He Chicago. She performed in Nicholas Nick­ of Boston. DIANNE ROSENSTRATTER GRUBB also serves on the board of trustees of Hid­ leby last year. JANICE MEAGHER writes that she is works as a staff consultant for Arthur An­ den Valley, an institute of the performing JOHN V. ALEXANDROV III is control­ enjoying business school at Columbia Uni­ dersen in Roseland, NJ. arts in Carmel Valley, CA. ler with Despres, Inc. versity and is still playing squash in New GREG MARTIN is an AVP at A.G. DEBORAH MEAGHER just started a CYNTHIA BALLANTYNE manages York City. Becker and Paribus. KURT MEISTER is new job with a division of J . Walter "Knitpickers," a store on Newbury Street JEAN MURPHY will be moving to Cam­ the men's accessory buyer for Straw­ Thompson. Her area specializes in direct in Boston, MA which sells hand knit, one­ bridge, MA in the fall to attend John F. bridge Clothier. response marketing. of-a-kind sweaters. Kennedy School of Government at Har­ ELLEN BEASLEY, who is studying at vard University. She's "looking forward the University of Chicago, writes that she to the move and to getting back to school." enjoys seeing KEECY HADDEN and SUSAN NETSCH is a drug chemist for RICK BANGS '81 who are attending the Indiana State Police in Lowell, IN. Northwestern. JOHN O'BRIEN will be moving to Mas­ MADELINE BATISTICH is a program­ sachusetts in September. mer/analyst with Drexel Burnham Lam­ AUDREY PATRONE is working for the bert, Inc. in New York City. Reagan-Bush campaign in Washington, LYDIA BLIVEN received her master's D.C. in education from the University of Penn­ FRANCES PLOUGH was married in sylvania. June, 1983 to Jeb Seder, a Williams grad. I BETSEY BRANSFIELD moved back They are living in New York City. from Denver to Boston and is currently SUSAN PRATT moved back to Prince­ 44 working for the Reece Corporation as a ton, NJ and is looking for a job for the fall. ~--- market planning analyst. She planned a five-week trek to the Hima­ LORRAINE deLABRY BROVvN is a layas in the summer. We want to keep in touch with all our classmates and alumni senior research coordinator in psychoso­ DAN SARGIS' May commencement friends. So, if you have changed your address, let us know in the cial programs at the University of Penn­ from the graduate school of management space below. A special plea to the class of 1983- where are you? sylvania Cancer Center in Philadelphia, at Cornell was attended by JEFF LONG PA. and CINDY JASON '83. DAVID CARVJLL is working as a secu­ STEPHEN SLADE was promoted to Nam~------Ciass ____ rity guard at Hewlett-Packard while he at­ assistant vice president of Worth Star tends Colorado State University working Reinsurance Corporation in February. He If your present address does not match that on the mailing tape please toward a master's in environmental health. lives in Rowayton. check here 0 He writes that he skis an average of 15 MARY LEE SOLE graduated from times a year and "loves the wide open medical school at U.C.L.A. She will be New Res. Address ------West." doing her internship in surgery at the Beginning May 14th, DAVID CLARK. Graduate Hospital in Philadelphia and JR. became a pesonnel officer with Equi­ City ------State ------Zip ------hopes to visit Trinity to see a hockey game. table Bank in Baltimore, MD. He is re­ STEPHEN SULLIVAN was recently sponsible for developing and implementing Res. Tel: ------Bu s. Tel: ------named assistant vice president of the insti­ the college recruiting program and will as­ tutional investor division at F AIC Securi­ sist with executive recruiting. ties, Inc. in Miami, FL. Your present company ------GARY COHEN graduated from New CORNELIA PARSONS THORN­ York Medical College in June. BURGH worked this summer at Benton & Title ------ALICIA CRAFFEY is applying to grad­ Bowles as an assistant account executive. uate school. with the goal of obtaining a She expected to return to Columbia Busi­ master's degree in genetic counseling. Bus·. Address ------ness School in the fall. ANNIE VIVE CRAIN is living in Hous­ ROBERT WERNER is now an attorney ton, TX and going through the training City ------State ------Zip ------associated with the law firm of Brady, Ta­ program at First City National Bank. money, Gerlt, Willard & Alexander in West LANIER DREW qualified for the Olym­ Hartford. WHAT'S NEW------pic Marathon Trials which were held May SANDRA RUFF YOUNG is an M.B.A. 12 in Olympia, W A. She plans to being law candidate in marketing at Golden Gate school in August. University in San Francisco, CA. MARSHALL DUDLEY, JR. has joined Outline, Inc. as a manufacturer's repre­ Class Agent: David J. Koeppel, Esq. sentative. BRUCE FEINBERG graduated from medical school at the Medical College of Pennsylvania and will be at the Medical A. Leigh Mountford College of Virginia for a residency in ob­ 147 Green Hill Rd. stetrics and gynecology. 81 Kinnelon, NJ 07405 LESLIE FINCH is an accounting clerk at Savers Federal Savings & Loan Associ­ CORNELIA ATCHLEY spent six weeks ation in Little Rock, AR. She writes of a in Greece this summer. "new development of an old hobby:" she CRESSIDA BAINTON works in video has been a soloist with Ballet Arkansas, a productions at Drexel Burnham Lambert Mail to: Alumni Office, Trinity College, semi-professional dance company. in New York City. Hartford, CT 06106 PETER GREENLEAF is international BARRY BERGQUIST writes that sales manager for Chemical Leaman Tank Sharon and MIKE WHITE expect a baby ~------~ Lines, Inc. in Houston, TX. in September. After receiving his bachelor's degree in the Hartford law firm , Cohn and Birn­ HEFFERON gladly observe that they sur­ impressive showing this time out and win electrical engineering from the Air Force baum. vived the first year of law school, at UConn the gold star. SEIF SAGHRI lives in New Institute of Technology, MICHAEL MARY ROSEBROUGH is an assistant and Chicago, respectively. Also in law York and works for Galahad Enterprises. CHARBONNIER was promoted to first product manager at H.J. Heinz Co. in school. but a year ahead, STEVE GROSS­ STORY SAVAGE is also in New York, lieutenant. He is a communications and Pittsburgh, PA. MAN manages to hold down the position where she is a statistical assistant and is electronics engineer at Keesler Air Force LAWRENCE ROSENTHAL received of news editor for the New York Law earning her C.P.C.U. (an insurance de­ Base in Mississippi. his master's degree in chemistry at Clark School Reporter, in addition to studying. gree, didn't you Hartford folks know CATHARINE CUMMINS COATS is the University this spring and hopes to have STEVE ELMENDORF will join Man­ that??). The rest of the S's are spread coordinator of alumnae/admissions pro­ completed his Ph.D. by next summer. dale's Michigan campaign as deputy state throughout the East Coast. CONNIE grams at Chatham College. She oversees DEDE SEEBER was married on May 6 director. He has been a member of Moo­ SMITH is in the audit department of First and develops scholarship programs and al­ (see Weddings). She and David will be liv­ dale's staff since July of 1983. He returns National Bank of Boston and lives just umnae efforts in student recruiting. She ing in Chicago, IL. to Michigan where he was deputy field di­ down the street from Fenway Park. writes, "Would love to know what has hap­ EMILY SINGER is a second year law rector during the caucuses. Since then he SANDY SMITH is in Pennsylvania get­ pened to KEN HALPIN '80." school student at Hofstra Law and is also has worked in Wisconsin, North Carolina ting both her law and M.B.A. degrees at EUGENIA ERSKINE reports that she working for John G. Dalton, Jr. Esq. in and ~ew Jersey as a member of the na­ Villanova. On the more exotic side, SCOTT enjoyed skiing with classmates CARO­ Port Washington, NY. She lives on a tional field staff. He also worked in Wash­ SULLIVAN is an account executive in LYN SADLER and NANCY Mc­ houseboat in Port Washington. ington, D.C. and San Francisco as a Miami and ANDY STEPHENSON is CULLOCH at Vail. CO. Eugenia is a bond PETER J. SMITH has been named re­ delegate coordinator for several states working as a biologist and mate on the trader with Bank of California in San cipient of the 1983-84 Cory Award pre­ after the primary season. Geronimo, a 54 foot ketch. for the sum­ Francisco. sented by Scripture Press Ministries for Backtracking in the alphabet, LISA mer. Sounds like we all may be in the ALICIA GIANGRANDE is living in New excellence in Christian education. His es­ DONAHUE is still in the Big Apple, with wrong line of work. Haven and working at Philips Medical Sys­ say, "Larry Richards' Definition of Chris­ Manufacturers Hanover, as a territory as­ "TODD VAN AMBURGH is directing tems in Shelton. tian Education," was the outstanding sistant. SARAH GLYNN is also in man­ his own adaptation of Bertolt Brecht's MICHAEL GOSS graduated from the entry in the Christian Education Graduate agement. but of a different sort- she's gangster parable Arturo Vi at St. Paul's University of Pennsylvania with a mas­ Division. been managing the Hartford Civic Center School." (He is also, obviously, trying his ter's in chemical engineering. He is a proc­ SUSAN TAYLOR recently completed skyboxes for the Hartford Whalers for a band at writing Class Notes for his favor­ ess engineer with IBM Corp. in Hopewell her master's qualifying exams in the his­ year now! EMILIE KAULBACH is learn­ ite '82er!) It sounds like RUSS WILLNER Junction, NY. tory of art and is an "official Ph.D. candi­ ing the ropes as a management trainee at is too busy to even write his own Class KEVIN HALL spent the summer clerk­ date looking forward to 1985/6 in Paris, Manufacturers Hanover in New York City, Note- he just received his M.S. in electri­ ing for the Hartford law firm of Hebb and France." at the same office as LISA DONAHUE. cal engineering, wrote a thesis on laser Gitlin. ELEANOR WENNER has a new job. Emilie's roommates are SHERRY BEN­ induced diffusion (got that?) and has had LESLIE KASE graduated from Bran­ She will be a lobbyist with the Health In­ ZEL (see above) and MARGOT TAMO­ several journal articles published. He's now deis University's Heller School with a mas­ surance Association of America (a branch NEY (don't see below). with RCA in Lancaster, P A. PARSONS ter's in public management. of the American Council of Life Insur­ JULIE GRIFFIN reports from out here WITBECK sounds busy, too. She's still at JEANNE KULEWICZ finished a mas­ ances). in the Second City where she is an auditor the development office at Harvard (a small ter's degree in information science at Sim­ with Touche, Ross. BILL LINDQUIST is college in Cambridge, MA), is living in mons College. Class Agents: Richard P. Dahling also out this way, where he finishes up at Newton Corner and "loves suburbia." DIRK KUYK Ill received an M.F.A. in Sibley Gillis the University of Michigan. Hopefully, by Finally, the two best bits of news. TONY stage design in May. the time this reaches everyone, he'll be in PACE and ANITA PACE '83 have be· F. KELLY LAWLER lives in Vermont North Carolina as a marketing assistant come house parents for A Better Chance, with husband Tom Bartlett. She writes. Thomas Hefferon for R.J. Reynolds. That brings me back to an organization helping gifted minority "All ski fanatics are invited to come play First Floor the alphabet- BRITTA KEEHN has students prepare for college. Tony has also in our backyard during snow season." 5220 South Kim bark Ave. transferred to the New York regional of­ been an admissions counselor at Trinity. MARY LORILLARD has started an 82 Chicago, IL 60615 fice of Continental Bank (from Illinois) and The Paces, and the program, received a outdoor educational adventure program ROB LEAVITT is now in his third year welcome and very flattering write-up in for teenagers. They "travel through the Greetings from Chicago! I've got a fair (he forgets to remind me where but I think the Hartford Coumnt on May 29. On the western U.S. and along our route we white amount of news, so let's get right down to I remember it to be Columbia - sorry Rob other hand, "Senator" BILL HOLDEN 45 water raft, horsepack, sail, bicycle and it. Thought I'd try something different and if that's not right!). CHRISSY MASTERS and JIM 'PHELPS took the time to report ride." The name of her company is Adven­ go in alphabetical order. No fair reading is as dependable as always with lots of news to TC that they had "no new news," were tures Rolling Cross-Country and is based just about your friends. from Philadelphia. Chrissy is still at First still living at the same address and still had in New York City. Of course we start with the A's. ROB Pennsylvania Bank, now going through ro­ the same job. Great to hear from you both WILLIAM LUBY just finished his first AHRENSDORF checks in from Milwau­ tational tours in other departments includ­ anyway! year at Fuqua School of Business at Duke kee where he is working for a manage­ ing cash management and international And that's all for now. I'll expect to hear University. He is in the same class as KA­ ment consulting firm during the summer administration. She also notes other Trin from everyone before the next issue. By TIE JEBB '80 and LISA PARKER '80. and anticipating returning to Northwest­ alums at First Pennsylvania - LINDA the time you get this we'll be half of the An April, 1984 Hartford Courant fea­ ern for his master's in business. Also in JOHNSON '83 and DON ATKINS. way to our 5 year Reunion, so check in ture story describes ALEX MAGOUN's business - and an important one for old ln Texas, as always, KEITH "TEX" when you get a chance. Meanwhile, have a occupation as a waiter at Hartford's Comet Trin- STEVE ANDSAGER continues to McATEER is at Southwestern Medical great time. Diner. The article also details Alex's keep the alumni money flowing in the School in Dallas. By the time everyone gets achievements as a long distance runner. matching gifts and civic affairs depart­ this he'll be married, as well - to Sheila Class Agents: Patricia Hooper A letter from WENDY MELVILLE ment at CIGNA in Hartford. On to the B's Davidson '86 on October 24. Also on the Steven Elmendorf says: "Have just moved to Sacramento to brings DIANE BROODER who writes other side of the world (!) ANNE MI­ begin an entirely new career as an account that she still is at Michael's Jewelers and CRA UD is a Peace Corps volunteer in executive (i.e. stockbroker) for Merrill now lives on the top floor of a 200-year-old Togo, West A.frica. And, as expected, Lynch. Until August, I will be trying to house in Glastonbury. Quite far away in ERIC MENDOZA-WOODS has finally Laura A. Wilcox pass numerous SEC examinations and the bright lights on Broadway, SHERRY gone into orbit. Eric's three latest stories 11 'h Huntington St., A6 after that I will begin building a book of BENZEL is a consultant for DRI (Data are that BILL TALBOT, PAUL SCOLA 83 Hartford, CT 06105 accounts. I saw ANNE WARNER regu­ Resources, for the uninitiated) in New and he have bought a yarn shop and spec­ larly in San Francisco until I moved. Hope­ York. Close by in New Jersey, DAVE ialize in macrame, that they have started a Well, here we are again. I just received fully, some Trinity people will show up BURWELL says "hello" from Princeton Cowsills fan club (and are looking for the most recent Trinity Reporter and as I here, too." where he is studying chemistry and living members) and that he has married Melinda simmer at my typewriter in the midst of CHARLOTTE MERYMAN is a staff the engaged life. Congrats! Mendoza. At least two of those stories are August humidity, I long for a cool May Day writer for the Newton Graphic in Newton, Show biz has never had it so good. PE­ definitely far out ... on the Quad. How 'bout that Medieval re­ MA. TER BROWN tells us that he is "arts and Back to earth and the P's. ARMANDO velry? While we either watched or read TAREK NAKHLA is working in Citi­ entertainment coordinator" at the Snow­ PAOLINO has left his research job at the about the undergrads dancing around the bank in its Middle East division as a man­ bird Institute in Little Cottonwood Can­ State Capitol and is now director of field maypole, it seems that most of us have agement trainee. He moved to New York yon, UT. Peter tells us also that he's operations for the Towland for Congress been slogging it out behind a desk. City from Washington, D.C. where he was helping to drum up some Trin students out campaign in the Waterbury area. Also in In Connecticut: ANDY AIKEN is a field working as a consultant for a Saudi Ara­ that way. Closer to home, LUCY COLE transition, KAREN PETERSEN has left engineer with Bartlett, Brainard, Eacott, bian consulting firm. has been promoted to executive assistant Saint Lawrence College to become direc­ Inc. in Bloomfield. LAURA JOHNSTON ELLEN NALLE is special events coor­ to the public relations and marketing di­ tor of the annual fund of Trinity College - ARLING lives in Bristol, works for The dinator with Conde Nast Publications/ rector of Arena Stage. ROGER COUTU is in Burlington, VT. Congrats to Karen, as Travelers Insurance Company, and at­ SELF Magazine in New York City. She on the move - he writes that he bought a well! PHIL PROPPER, excuse me, Sec­ tends the Hartford Graduate Center. JA­ "loves" her job and notes that she sees 5 acre farm as an investment! Also on the ond Lieutenant Phil Propper, is now in NET BOLLINGER now has what she calls SUE MACGRATH, ERROL TRAIN. move is TOM CROWELL, now joining training at George Air J<'orce Base in Cali­ "a real job" with Greenwich Research As­ LISA LORILLARD, LAURA LAUGH­ many other Trin grads at DRI (you should fornia for F-4 fighters. That's pretty hard sociates. CAROLINE EVANS is an assist­ LIN and FRANCESCA SEEGER often. know by now what that stands for) in Lex­ to argue with, Phil. To round out the P's, ant teacher at the Institute of Living. PHILIP PEDRO was recently promoted ington, MA. STEPHANIE PAPPAS is an immuno­ TODD LA VIERI works for Sterling En­ to senior programmer/analyst with Com­ A couple of diligent students continue to chemistry sales specialist in Detroit for gineering and lives in Farmington with bustion Engineering in Windsor. check in. HENRY DePHILLIPS reports, American Hospital Supply Corporation. DAN MOALI, who, I believe (but correct JAMES POMEROY has completed his "I'm halfway through medical school and CAROL RUMERY contributes some me if I'm wrong), is working for TAPCO, first year at UConn Law School. still going strong!" JIM DOD is undoubt­ news - she got engaged in June and also a theatre management firm . PAUL MER­ MICHAEL REINER graduated from edly in the same position in psychology at is earning her M.B.A. at Temple Univer­ RIGAN is living in southern Connecticut UConn's Law and Business Schools in University of Illinois where he is also a sity in Philadelphia. She still holds her job working as a research assistant for Pfizer May. Jn September he will be working for T.A. DENNIS GILLOOLY and TOM at Mellon Bank. The S's make the most Central Research in Groton. DAVE MAY is a math teacher and crew coach at Salis­ has completed her first year at UConn Law office furniture firm in downtown Boston. at Blessings in New Haven- I'd waited bury School. CHRIS OAKLEY is an entry School. This summer she will be helping a CARMEALETTE SMITH wrote that her for that moment for a long time ... leva! interior designer with Russell Gibson professor research and finish a textbook. first child was expected on May 15. JOE ADLER has gone to Japan to teach Von Dohlen, Inc. in Farmington. He has Also at UConn is TIM YASUI, an M.B.A . So, that's all the news, folks. It sounds English. plans to attend graduate school in this field. candidate at the school of business admin­ like everyone is fine and dandy so keep MATT GOLDING is working in Boston. Another teacher in the area is TRACY istration; BILL COLBY is at Dickinson those cards and letters coming. Nothing He hung up on me once this summer and I SPARMER, a substitute math teacher Law School in Carlisle, PA. Other law stu­ like a good letter to perk up a usually empty haven't heard from him since . with Plainville High School. Tracy has also dents are MIKE KENNEY at the Univer­ mail box . I hope to hear from some mor~ MARTHA BELCHER was last heard worked as a freelance electronic design sity of Bridgeport; JOHN LEMONICK at of you. After having seen DOM RAPINI from as she headed in the direction of Nan­ technician and is the chairman of Plain­ UVM; ELIOT LEVINE at Washington putting the shot on a Toyota commercial tucket after finishing a summer internship ville's Chemical People, a drug/alcohol College School of Law at American Uni­ recently, I know we all have to be some­ with Citibank in New York. abuse task force. versity in Washington, D.C.; ELLEN where. Please write soon with good news. KIRSTEN HERTZ will be attending law Moving north to Boston we find ANNE SOFFIN at Duke University; and CHRIS Take care. school at the University of Buffalo. COLLINS who says that life is "so far so SULLIVAN who is "weathering the first Class Agents: Anne N. Ginsburgh I tried to sell my van to BRIAN DRIS­ good." Anne is living at home working on year of law school" at Catholic Universi­ Charles Guck COLL who's enjoying the corporate life at consumer and environmental protection at ty's Columbus School of Law. This sum­ LauraMecke Aetna. He didn't seem interested. MASSPIRG. Also in Massachusetts are mer he was working at the public MIKE SCHWEIGHOFFER hasn't been LINDA SEUFERT, a real estate broker Defender's Service as a criminal investi­ heard from since he began his job at Con­ and new member of the Massachusetts As­ gative assistant; KARF)N TANNEN­ necticut Bank and Trust. He and Brian sociation of Realtors, living in South BAUM is a "first year low-life law student" were trying to figure out how they'd be Chatham; and DIGGER ZIDELIS, who at Tulane University School of Law; and Jane W. Melvin able to work and play golf at the same works as an investigator at the Worcester DAN! TAITZ, who will be married in Au­ c/o The Coro Foundation time. D.A.'s office. gust, attends Cornell University Law 20 West 40th St. Please write if you think of it. I'll be The majority of the fellow grads I have School. 84 New York, NY 10016 looking forward to hearing from you. If heard from are based in New York City. A ALLEN LePORE is also at Cornell you're in New York and you see a familiar number of happy foursomes are making "currently working on gallius arsenide Welcome to the wonderful world of al­ face selling hot dogs in the fall and hot their appearances in the Big Apple: DAN light electron mobility transistors" as a umni-ism (whatever that is). The only thing chestnuts in the winter, be kind- it's LEAVY at Lehman Brothers, JAMIE graduate research associate; TERESA I've figured out so far is that we don't have probably me ... Enjoy your new adven­ KAPTEYN at Grey Advertising, TODD LIGNELLI will begin a three year grad to worry about sitting in I -84 traffic jams tures, Class of '84. CLARK at Paine Webber, and JAMIE program in the department of conserva­ on the way back to school and most of us DOOLEY whose job is a mystery, are re­ tion of historic and artistic works at SUNY won't be writing "student" on the dotted siding on Park Avenue South. According Buffalo; RACHEL MANN will start an line of any form asking about "employ­ to Jamie Kapteyn, "we all get a lot of sleep M.A. in Russian studies at the UV A de­ ment." I envy any of you who can still do and never go out." Sounds like a lot of fun . partment of slavic languages and litera­ that. MASTERS TODD BEAT! writes that "KEVIN ture this fall; ROB MARKSTEIN is a first As this is the first "column" for the Class O'CALLAGHAN, ANDER WENSBERG, year student at the Fuqua School of Busi­ of '84, I don't have a lot to "report." In the and I will be expecting a guest ... MIKE ness at Duke University; OREN MILLER future, please be sure to fill out the cards BRIGHAM is joining us as the fourth is working in the department of chemistry sent to you by the Alumni Office. Your 1937 member of the Trinity Suite. I don't think at UCLA; LISA NEBBIA is an M.B.A. classmates want to know what you're HOWARD R. GOODY sends the news New York will ever be the same." Yes, candidate at University of Michigan's doing. Also, feel free to write or call me that he has been married fifty years. you're probably right. I met ROBIN FINS Graduate School of Business Administra­ directly or in care of the Alumni Office at at St. Patrick's one Sunday when we heard tion; SASHA OPEL is working with spe­ dear old Trin. 1947 Floyd Higgins '85 give a concert. Robin's cial needs children at Delta Projects, Inc. To begin ... JACK GIBBONS, JON DI­ Edie and ART SEBELIUS combine internship this summer is with the opera until she attends Simmons School of Social LUZIO, and Tilvi NASH spent some time family activities from California to Florida at as she continues her Work in Boston; BOBBI SCHERR has in Europe after graduation. Our friends, and Canada, with successful "roots" master's in performing arts administra­ completed her first year as a medical stu­ allies, and fellow world inhabitants hav­ search in Sweden. They have located over 46 tion. WENDY GORLIN is working in an dent at Hahnemann Medical College in en't been the same since. If my informa­ 100 living relatives in Sweden and the advertising agency as a copywriter in mid­ Warminster, PA; STEVE SOPER, who tion is correct, Jack will be settling down U.S.A. and plan next to follow clues to town Manhattan. CARIE L. MANKE is in has been studying in Bologna, Italy, spent to work for Pratt & Whitney, Jon for IBM, Australia and Finland. the management training program at the summer at the University of Cracow, and Tim for Data Resources, Inc. Chemical Bank. DOUG MORSE works at Poland; STEVE SOLIK will be a medical AMY SNYDER (who travelled in Eu­ 1949 Abrams, Bemisch, Riker, Inc., a commer­ student at Michigan State Osteopathic rope with LIZ LYNCH) is in law school in DOROTHY DEARLE writes that her cial real estate firm "in direct competition School of Medicine; TERYL STAPLE­ Boston. PETER MARCELLO, who spent husband died June 28, 1983, as the res•.tlt to JIM FREDERICKS at Jones, Lang, TON is a Ph.D. candidate at Temple Uni­ the summer doing research in a lab (how of a broken hip. She is attempting to sell Wooten." Good luck, and may the best man versity's religion department; and FRANK mysterious!), is in Boston, as well, begin­ her house, but finds the effort a "slow wm. VALDINOTO is a student at Columbia ning med school. process.n Also in New York: JANET MURPHY is University School of Dental and Oral Sur­ ERIC LINSLEY has settled in the Park a management trainee at Chase Manhat­ gery. Slope area of Brooklyn and is working for 1952 Arthur Andersen. His Brooklyn neighbor tan Bank; New Windsor is the home of Other notes from all over: TONY SCA­ ELEANOR McGEHAN is "enjoying re­ JIM REED, a claims rep for Connecticut is NANCY KATZ, who spends her time tirement with my family in the beautiful VONGELLI has been teaching English in working for Ted Bates Advertising and General Life Insurance; and CHRIS DE­ Rome and returned to Massachusetts in state of Texas." LANEY lives in Nanuet with PETE helping her friends retain sanity, in some May; MEG GOODWIN is an office man­ form or another, and find apartments. MILLER. Both work for Proctor and ager for the Powder River Basin Resource 1955 Gamble. Pete has just been transferred to LINDA KAPNEK. MICHELE ROS­ DAVID BREWER writes that he just Council in Sheridan, WY; VIRGINIA NER, and LORRAINE SAUNDERS are Sydney, Australia "where he'll finally be HAUGEN LUNDIN is an account execu­ finished his twelfth year of scouting in the able to continue his lacrosse career." I sharing quarters in New York. Linda is N .H.L., the last three being with the Bos­ tive for E.F. Hutton in United Arab Emir­ busy working for National Westminster thought they only played cricket and ates; WENDY FARNHAM is "presently ton Bruins, after stints with the Detroit boomerang over there. Others in the Met­ Bank, Lorraine is at Metropolit3¥' Life, and Red Wings (3 years), Kansas City Scouts teaching English at a private language Michele is at Citibank, patiently awaiting ropolitan area are: ED SHARP, a history school in Japan." Wendy ran into SALLY (2 years), Washington Capitals (2 years), teacher at the Wardlaw Hartridge School the fall when it won't matter if the air and Toronto Maple Leafs (2 years). Six of SCHWAGER in Osaka; also in Japan is conditioning isn't on or doesn't work. in Edison, NJ; Rich Steinberg, a district MARGOT BLATTMAN who has decided twelve years his teams have made the parts sales manager trainee for Nissan ED McGEHEE offered me a piece ofthe playoffs. to stay one more year as an English Fel­ rock so I would assume that means he's Motor Corp. in Piscataway, NJ; and AUS­ low; and LOU RENZULLI reports that LAWRENCE P. McGOVERN is still TIN WILMERDING, a design engineer for busy at Prudential or he's taken up rock teaching English to Spanish-speaking "Premier Andropov is extremely ill" which climbing. the LTS Corp. in Trenton, NJ. Austin re­ tran:,Jates to "things in New Jersey are Puerto Ricans at the Richard J. Kinsella ports that he is "doing well and enjoying CHIP FARNHAM stopped by a few bad - please send borscht." Community School in Hartford. myself." weeks ago and tried to sell me something Moving south to Pennsylvania, AMY JO "GREG" BROWN is a branch repre­ that one puts on one's sailboat. Sorry, 1956 BENNETT is now a legal assistant with sentative with Household Finance Corp. in Chip, but I still don't understand. Anyone JACK R. WHITE and his wife, Jayne, Morgan, Lewis, and Bockius in Philadel­ Bridgeton, MO . NANCY CHIRA also desiring info should wait till the next issue left on May 1 for a five-month cruise up phia; STEVE NAJARIAN works as a works for Household Finance, but in Boul­ of the RepoTter - by then I hope I'll have the Atlantic Coast to Maine and back. branch manager for the Bank of Pennsyl­ der, CO. She writes, "Anybody heading it straightened out. vania in Reading; DAVE NAGLE writes west is more than welcome to stop by my MIKE HAVARD played some tennis this 1961 that he has "been working as a paralegal house en route." HENRY D'AURIA is a summer and began the Banker's Trust This summer, DR. BETTE J. DEL in a Philly law firm" - he now will be re­ research assistant with Paine Webber training program in September. KATIE GIORNO taught in the Poconos at the Na­ turning to Trinity as Sports Information Mitchell Hutchins, Inc. in New York City. FINCK began work at Manufacturer's tional Science Teachers Association Mi­ Director. Down in our nation's capital we JAMES GRENEN has finished his first Hanover at the same time. , crocomputer Camp for Honors Teachers. find JANE MOODY who is "currently year at the University of Pittsburgh's Law WEEZJE KERR and LANEY LYNCH RICHARD OLNEY notes that he is working for World Access, Inc., as a Eu­ School. KEVIN O'CALLAGHAN is assist­ are enjoying making decisions about what's starting his third career. He is a retired ropean assistance coordinator;" and ant superintendent with H.R.H. Construc­ next. Running out of gas in Texas and get­ Air Force Colonel and as of June, 1984 will CHARLIE INGERSOLL, a special assist­ tion Company in New York City and is ting shoes chewed up didn't concern them be retired as a builder, developer, motel ant for the Reagan-Bush '84 Committee. "currently building the executive floors for too much . owner (Mystic Days Inn). His third career As for those classmates who are still stu­ the AT & T corporate headquarters at 550 BRYAN CHEGWIDDEN began law is as an "avid golfer inspector of fair­ dents: BRUCE CHOZICK is attending Madison Avenue.'' BETH PRUETT loves school at Yale this fall. I thoroughly en­ ways, woods, hazards, traps and greens - UConn Med School; CYNTHIA JASON her new job with an interior design and joyed having Chegs wait on me one night in that order." 1965 1974 RONALD DE MARIS writes that he has SALLY HARRIS passed the Ph.D. can­ NED GRANGER KENDALL, 1922 poems forthcoming in American Poetry didacy exam and is currently writing her Ned G. Kendall of Hudson, OH died on Review, Partisan Review, New Orleans dissertation at the University of Minne­ July 26, 1984. He was 85. Rev·iew and The Literary Review. sota. Born in Granby, CT, he graduated from ROBERT STYRING is married and he KIRTLAND SNYDER has an article and In Memory Dean Academy in Franklin, MA. He at­ and his wife are expecting their first child poetry forthcoming in Midstream maga­ tended Trinity for two years, entering with in December. zme. the Class of 1922. He was a member of 1967 Delta Kappa Epsilon. JUDY SEDGEMAN and her husband. 1975 He had been an office manager at The Bill, who acquired majority interest in an WILSON H. FAUDE has been elected a CLARENCE WILSON HAHN, 1901 Travelers Insurance Company in Des independent bank three years ago, have trustee at the Renbrook School in West Clarence W. Hahn of Flushing, NY died Moines, IA. He leaves his wife, Ethel Gray Kendall; worked to build the bank from start-up to Hartford. on January 9, 1981. He was 103. a son, Ned G., Jr.; a daughter, Ann G. $35 million in assets. They find "working Born in Plainville, OH, he graduated Noblett; and seven grandchildren. as husband/wife banking professionals from Madisonville High School in Madi­ very satisfying." 1977 PAT SULLIVAN is teaching history full­ sonville, OH. An 1899 graduate of the Uni­ time at Illing Junior High School in Man­ versity of Cincinnati, he received his M.S. 1968 degree from Trinity in 1901. He was an WALTER BERUBE, 1923 DON COSTALES has joined the adjunct chester. Her children are Timothy, 5 and Walter Berube of West Hartford, GT Kate, 2. instructor of natural history at Trinity faculty of Maryville College in St. Louis, from 1900-1901. Subsequently, he was died on July 6, 1984, He was 94. MO. He is in the management division. awarded an M.A. from Harvard Univer­ Born in Fishkill, NY, he attended Trin­ JOHN LARKIN has been named as dean 1979 sity in 1903. ity with the Class of 1923, after his grad­ of the college of humanities of the Univer­ LORRAINE GENTILE works for the He retired iu 1940 after 41 years of edu­ uation from the Perkiomen School in sity of Puerto Rico of Rio Piedras, where Veterans Administration in Hartford. cational work, including 12 years of re­ Perkiomen, P A. he had been serving as chairman of the ANN TREGLIA-HESS is senior con­ search on fish parasites for the U.S. A veteran of World War I, he had been English department. sultant/attorney with Aetna Life and Cas­ Bureau of Fisheries. He also participated employed as a salesman by the Phoenix 1969 ualty in Hartford. She graduated in in cancer research at the Queens General Insurance Company for 35 years prior to RON GIGUERE received his Ph.D. in December, 1983 from UConn School of Hospital in Long Island. his retirement in 1969. French from UConn in August, 1983. He Law. She is currently matriculating at He had been a member of the Congre­ He was a member of Wyllys Lodge No. is now the assistant professor of French at UConn School of Business where she is gational Church of Flushing, and was affil­ 99 AF&AM of West Hartford, the West the University of North Carolina in Ashe­ working toward an M.B.A. in interna­ iated with the American Society for the Hartford Regents, and the West Hartford ville. tional business and marketing. She just re­ Advancement of Science and the Ameri­ Civitan Club. MARGARET McGOVERN has just re­ turned from Bermuda for some "R & R" can National Teachers' Association . He is survived by two nieces and a turned from a three-month round-the­ after the bar exam. nephew. world cruise on the QE2 where she served as editor of the ship newspaper, the QE2 1981 ALLEN REED GOODALE, 1905 Time$. She writes, "Hit 29 ports in 89 days GEORGE E. BLAIR III graduated with Allen R. Goodale of Hartford, GT died CHARLES CARPENTER SISE, 1925 and produced a 4-page paper ... plus honors in May from UConn School of Law. on June 9, 1984. He was 99 . Charles C. Sise of Philadelphia, P A died dressing for dinner! Now back to finishing GAIL GRISWOLD SMITH is now a P & Born in Sudbury, MA, he graduated from on August 19, 1978. He was 77. a screenplay." P supervisor (full-time) and part-time math Connecticut Literary Institute, now Suf­ Born in Portsmouth, NH, he graduated At the annual meeting in March, 1984, instructor at the University of Florida in field Academy, in 1901. He received his from the Middlesex School in Concord, ANTHONY SHOOKUS was elected treas­ Gainesville. B.A. degree from Trinity in 1905. His MA. He attended Trinity for one year with the Glass of 1925 before transferring to urer of the Connecticut section of the 1982 many activities while at the College in­ Green Mountain Club for the fifth consec­ Harvard University where he received his JENNIFER ZELIFF planned to be cluded memberships in Phi Gamma Delta; utive year. B.S. degree in 1925. married on August 19, 1984 toR. Timothy the track team of which he was captain; He had been employed by the Insurance Kearney, a 1976 Yale graduate and a doc­ the class football, baseball and track teams; 1970 Company of North America before his re­ 47 toral candidate at Fuller Theological Sem­ the Ivy Board, and the Tennis Club, of JOAN MORGAN BRING has been pro­ inary in clinical psychology. They will be which he was vice president. In addition, tirement. moted to the position of field underwriter living in Altadena, CA where Jennifer he won the Alumni English Prize in 1905 with the Grand Pacific Life Insurance plans to continue teaching high school and was Class Day orator and presented HENRY TAYLOR STONE, 1925 Company in Honolulu, HI. Her daughter, English. the honor Oration at Commencement. For Heather Avice, was born in January of many years he was Class Agent for the Henry T. Stone of Farmington, CT died 1983. 1983 Class of 1905. on July 2, 1984. He was 81. On July 1, 1984 DENNIS H. GRUBBS The presentation of the 1983 Edward Upon graduation he worked for The Born in Urbana, OH, he graduated from was appointed headmaster of Williston­ Lewis Wallant Book Award took place at Travelers Insurance Company where he Hartford Public High School. He received Northampton School in Easthampton, MA. the Hartford Jewish Community Center was instrumental in the development of his B.S. degree from Trinity where he was MARILYN COLVIN MILLER was an on Wednesday, June 27th. FRANCES E. automotive insurance. He retired from a member of Alpha Delta Phi and the Ivy eighth grade English teacher at Placerita WALTMAN and her husband established Travelers in 1953. staff. Junior High School and chairman of the this award in 1963 to perpetuate the mem­ His community affiliations included a 50- He had been assistant vice president at English department. In August, 1983 she ory of Wallant, the author of The Pawn­ year membership at the First Church of the Connecticut Bank and Trust before received her M.S. in school counseling from broke?· and other novels. Christ, Wethersfield, where he was a for­ retiring in 1968. the University of LaVerne. She is now a mer deacon; the Wethersfield Board of Re­ Among his affiliations were member­ guidance counselor at Sierra Vista Junior lief, charter member and secretary of the ships in the Sphinx Temple AAONMS of High School in Canyon County, CA. She V-12 Wethersfield Country Club, and the Weth­ Wethersfield, the West Hartford Squires, was chosen as the Teacher of the Year ersfield Historical Society. He was also a Power Squadron, Middletown Yacht Club, (1984) for the William S. Hart School Dis­ former trustee of Suffield Academy and a and the Green Port, NY Yacht Club. In trict. REV. DA V1D T. GROSS and his wife drove cross-country on his sabbatical re­ retired member of the Old Guard of West addition, he was past master of Wyllys 1971 search/travel leave (one of the best per­ 'Hartford. Lodge No. 99, a 32nd degree mason, and BARBARA B. KENNELLY, member of quisites of teachers!). They saw the country He is survived by a son, David W. of a safe boating instructor in Farmington. the U.S. House of Representatives from and family and friends, plus visited ances­ Suncook, NH; a daughter, Mrs. John G. He leaves his wife, Leonara L. Stone; a the 1st Congressional District in Connect­ tors' home sites. At Syracuse University Robinson of Glastonbury, CT; eight grand­ son, Samuel M. II; a daughter, Elizabeth icut, delivered the_commencement address he is studying "Adult Education for Eld­ children; and twelve great-grandchildren. S. McCabe; a nephew; a niece; and seven at Mt. Holyoke College on May 27, 1984. ers, and for Volunteers and Paraprofes­ grandchildren. ROBERT D. MORTON has been pro­ sionals Who Serve Them." moted to senior vice president of the in­ REEVES LUKENS writes that he is re­ CARROLL BURTON CASE, 1922 DR. HENRY APTER, 1931 vestment division of First Connecticut questing retirement from the Naval Re­ Carroll B. Case of Hartford, CT died on Dr. Henry Apter of Hartford, GT died Bancorp, Inc. serve after over 40 years of service. July 10, 1984. He was 88. on July 22, 1984. He was 77. BETTY TWISS is "happy living full-time Born in Canton, he graduated :!'tom Born in Farmington, CT, he graduated at the Cape, doing some writing and paint­ • Hartford Public High School and received from Hartford Public High School. He at­ ing." HONORARII his B.S. degree from Trinity in 1922. tended Trinity College with the Glass of He was a veteran of World War I, serv­ 1931 and graduated summa cum laude 1972 ing with the Army in France. He was a from George Washington Medical School. WILLIAM MATT is a senior engineer at The July, 1984 issue of Nation's Busi­ member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, During World War II, he served as a Electric Boat in Groton. ness describes Vernon and ROBERT and served as commander for the state of captain in the U.S. Army Medical Corps ROBERT PILO finished his M.B.A. at KRIEBLE's business careers in an article Connecticut. and received the Purple Heart and Bronze the University of Hartford this May. His entitled, "Drop by Drop, His Firm Won A civil engineer, he joined Hartford's Star for service at Guadalcanal. wife received her M.B.A. from Northeast­ Worldwide Success." building department in 1926, and was em­ After interning at Mt. Sinai Hospital in ern University in Boston, MA in Decem­ WILLIAM B. WALSH, JR. is currently ployed there for 40 years. New York City, be practiced cardiology ber, 1983. They now have two daughters ­ the vice president for operations of Project He had led a Boy Scout troop at Hart­ for over 40 years and was on the staff of Katharine, 2 '12 and Christine, 11/z. Hope, managing projects in 20 countries ford's South Congregational Church and Hartford Hospital. He was a member of including El Salvador, China, Grenada, Ja­ had been a member of the board of direc­ the American Medical Association, the 1973 maica, Poland, and Honduras. Ln 1983, he tors of the Center City Churches for tbe Connecticut State Medical Association, F. GRAHAM BROWN is headmaster at was a presidential fellow, working for the Aging. and the Hartford County Medical Associ­ the Canterbury School in Ft. Myers, FL. Secretary of Defense. He is survived by a niece. ation. He was a diplomate of the American Academy of Cardiology, and an officer in Trinity in 1937. During his undergraduate tired in 1976 and returned to Nantucket. daughters, Patricia Freiburghaus of Den­ the American College of Cardiology. years he served as president of Alpha Chi Surviving are his wife, Dorothy Strong; ver, CO, and Barbara Graff of Windsor, He is survived by his wife, Mae Dubin Rho fraternity, president of the Senate in a daughter, Alice Mitzgar; a sister; a CT; and his mother. Apter; a sister, Mrs. Rose Weinberg; and 1937, and president· of his class in 1934, - brother: and two grandchildren. a nephew. 1935 and 1936. He was also a member of Medusa, the Sophomore Dining Club, the ALLEN WRISLEY MERRELL, 1939 Atheneum Society, the varsity football and WALLACE LUDWIG ANDERSON, Allen W. Merrell of Gulfstream, FL died ROBERT BJARKMAN, 1933 baseball teams, and the Tripod. Subse­ 1939 on October 6, 1983. He was 67. Robert Bjarkman of Englewood, FL quently, he attended Boston University, Wallace L. Anderson of Stoughton. MA Born in Las Cruces, NM, he graduated died on February 1, 1984. He was 71. receiving his M.Ed. degree in 1943. died on August 12, 1984. He was 66. from South Kent School in South Kent, Born in Springfield, MA, he graduated His professional positions and school af­ Born in' Hartford, CT, he graduated CT. He attended Trinity with the Class of from East Hartford High School before filiations include teacher and coach at St. from Bulkeley High School in that city. 1939 and was a member of Delta Upsilon attending Trinity with the Class of 1933. Paul's School in Concord, NH; teacher and He received his B.A. degree from Trinity fraternity. He was a graduate of the ad­ He was employed as a supervisor at the administrator at the Loomis School in in 1939 and his M.A. degree in 1945. At vanced management program at the Har­ Hartford Post Office before retiring in Windsor, CT; headmaster at Maumee Val­ Trinity he was a member of Sigma Nu vard Graduate School of Business 1968, and moving to Florida. ley Country Day School in Maumee, OH, fraternity, president of the Glee Club, in Administration. and headmaster of The Blake School in the choir, and on the Ivy board. He joined the Ford Motor Company in Hopkins, MN . He held various academic and adminis­ 1941 and became assistant to the presi­ DAVID STEDMAN HARRIS, 1934 He has been recipient of the Shattuck trative positions at the University of dent in 1945, civic and governmental af­ Centennial Award for col\tributions to David S. Harris of Huntington, NY died Northern Iowa at Cedar Falls, IA from fairs director in 1959 and was elected a secondary education. He is past president on March 30, 1979. He was 67. 1948 to 1972. He was a retired professor company vice-president in 1963. of the Independent Schools Association of of English, dean and vice president of ac­ After retiring from Ford in 1972, he Born in Aldan, PA, he received his B.A. the Central States, a member of the Head­ degree from Trinity 1935. ademic affairs at Bridgewater State Col­ was president and chairman of the Sattley in masters Association, past president of the Upon graduation he worked as a teacher lege, in Bridgewater, MA. Company, Detroit, manufacturers and dis­ Hopkins Chamber of Commerce, a at Friends' School in Philadelphia, PA. In mem­ He is listed in Who's Who in America, tributors of money handling machinery ber of the Country Day School Headmas­ 1947 he was appointed a teacher at Ken­ Contemporary Authm·s, the Directory of and equipment. ters Association, and a past director of the ilworth School near Pottst0wn, P A. American Scholars, Leaders in EducMion He was president of the Greater Board school-college division of the United Fund Inte-rnational Scholars, the Di1·ectory q( of Commerce in 1964-65 and was also in the Minneapolis, MN area. British and American Writers, and the president of the Greater Detroit Area He has served as a trustee of St. Mary's ALBERT EDWARD HOLLAND, 1934 Dictionary of International Biography. He Hospital Council from 1956-61. Hall in Fairbault, MN and as chairman of Albert E. Holland of Wellesley, MA died is the author of three books and many He also served as president of the United the Commission of National Registration. articles. Foundation, vice-president of the Metro­ on August 17, 1984. He was 72. In addition, he was vice-president of the Born in Wanamasa, NJ, he graduated He was the recipient of a Fulbright Fel­ politan Detroit Building Fund and as a National Council on School-College Rela­ lowship in 1957-1958; received the Al­ trustee for Oakwood Hospital and the De­ from Brooklyn Preparatory School. He tions. He was a member of the Independ­ entered Trinity in 1930 where he studied umni Service Award at the University of troit Educational Television Foundation. ent School Advisory Committee of Northern Iowa in 1969; and was a Gug­ He leaves his wife, Jean Merrell; two for two years. After business careers in Educational Records Bureau and a mem­ Germany and the Philippines, and a 37- genheim Fellow in 1967-1968. daughters, Susan Webster and Jeanie ber of the Board of Directors of the Na­ He leaves his wife, Mary Belden Ander­ Caproni; two sons, Allen W., Jr. and month internment by the Japanese in tional Association of Independent Schools. World War II, he returned to Trinity, re­ son of Bridgewater, MA; two sons, Hale George; and a sister. He was a member of the Episcopal of Cedar Falls, IA, and Whit of Chicago, ceiving his B.S. degree in 1946, with hon­ Church Vestry of Connecticut from 1945 ors in history and modern languages. IL; his mother; and a sister. to 1955. Also in Connecticut, he was a MELVIN HOWARD ST. CYR, 1942 Twelve years later he earned his M.S. de­ member of the Rotary and Exchange gree, and in 1959 received the Eigenbrodt Melvin H. St. Cyr of Waverly, PA died Clubs. He was a member of the Skylight EUGENE JACOB LIEDER, JR., 1939 Trophy, Trinity's highest alumni award. Club in Minnesota. on April 30, 1982. He was 68. From 1956 to 1966 he was vice presi­ He is survived by his wife, Ruth Wor­ Eugene J. Lieder, Jr. of Austin, TX died Born in East Boston, MA, he graduated 48 dent of Trinity College, having been a thington Henderson. on January 4, 1979. He was 63. from Mansfield Senior High School in teacher and administrator from 1946 to Born in Brooklyn, NY, he graduated Mansfield, MA. He received his B.A. de­ 1956. In 1966 he was named president of from the Gilman Country School in Balti­ gree from Trinity in 1942, and subse­ Hobart, an all-male college in Geneva, NY, BRUCE BEACH RANDALL, JR., 1937 more, MD. He attended Trinity from 1935 quently, graduated from Berkeley Divinity and William Smith, its female affiliate. He Bruce B. Randall, Jr. of Bridgewater, to 1938 and was a member of Delta Phi School in New Haven, CT. resigned two years later to become vice CT died on July 6, 1984. He was 68. fraternity. He also attended Princeton He was paster of the Grace Episcopal president of Wellesley College, where he Born in Bridgewater, CT, he graduated University. Church in Wav~rly from 1958 until his remained until his retirement in 1977. from Kent Boy's School in Kent, CT. In From 1938 to 1953 he was an underwri­ retirement in 1980. During that time, he At Trinity, he was active in fund raising 1937, he received his B.A. degree from ter at Gilmour, Rothery & Company in also served as vicar of the Christ Church and raised $10 million for the College. He Trinity, where he was president of the Boston, MA . From 1953 to 1962 he was of Wellsburg, NY. Prior to his pastorate headed two Community Chest campaigns Commons Cluh from 1936-37. employed by Scharmann Machine Corpo­ in Waverly, Father St. Cyr served in Ely, in Hartford, was awarded the Community He was production manager of the ration in Pittsburgh, P A, where he was NV, and at St. James Episcopal Church in Service medal, and served as head of the Sweet Catalogue Service in New York City the vice president of the company. Pulaski, NY for nine years. Hartford Symphony Society and the for a number of years, worked for the He was an active member of the Com­ Charter Oak Council of Boy Scouts. Brown Printing Company of Waseca, MN, munity Chest, and chaplain of the Wav­ He is survived by his wife, Eva Engel and was later employed at the Blandin EDWARD GUILD MANN, 1939 erly Fire Department. Holland; a son, Albert of Cohasset, MA; He is survived by two daughters, Bari Paper Company of New York City, retir­ Edward G. Mann of Bloomfield, CT died and a daughter, Dorita Urrata of Green­ ing as a sales executive. Schwenker of Fairfax, VA, and Sharon wich, CT. on July 22, 1984. He was 66. Tompkins of Bordentown, NJ; two sons, He was a member of St. Mark's Epis­ Born in Hartford, CT, he graduated copal Church in Bridgewater, where he Charles and Mark, both of Houston, TX; ft·om Bloomfield High School in Bloom­ one sister; and one granddaughter. WILLIAM FRAZIER SCOTT, 1936 served as senior warden emeritus, and field, CT. At Trinity he was a member of William F. Scott of Westport, CT died formerly as a member of the vestry. He the Trinity Commons Club, the Glee Club, was also founder ofthe Men's Club Lunch­ on August 19, 1984. He was 69. and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He BAYARD TRAIL DAVIDSON, 1943 Born in St. Davids, P A, he graduated eon Group of St. Mark's, and a member of received his B.S. degree in 1939 and in the Bridgewater Historical Bayard T. Davidson of Baltimore, MD from the Episcopal Academy at Over­ Society, the 1941 he received his M.B.A. from Harvard died on January 15. 1979. He was 59. brook, PA. In 1936 he received his B.A. board of managers at New Milford Hos­ University. degree from Trinity, where he was a mem­ pital, and St. Peter's Lodge of Masons in He was employed by Price, Waterhouse Born in Sewickley, P A, he graduated ber of Psi Upsilon, Phi Kappa Phi, and the New Milford. in Boston, MA from 1941 to 1947, and was from York Collegiate Institute in York, Sophomore Dining Club. He played on the He leaves a daughter, Diane Wells of a member of the Massachusetts Board of P A. He attended Trinity with the Class of 1943. football team his junior year. In 1939 he New Canaan, CT; his mother; an uncle; Certified Public Accountants. He joined and two grandchildren. the audit staff of the Hartford Insurance He served with the military in World received his LL.B. degree from the Uni­ War II. versity of Pennsylvania Law School. Group in 1947. He was named chief audi­ He had been employed by Olin Corpo­ tor in 1960, and became a corporate offi­ RICHARD AMOS STRONG, 1938, ration since 1955, his position at the time cer in 1967, retiring in 1981. He was past of retirement being general counsel. Richard A. Strong of Nantucket, MA president and director of the Southern DANIEL SMITH RIKER, JR., 1943 He is survived by his wife, Marion Car­ died on April2, 1982. He was 67 . New England Chapter of the Institute of Daniel S. Riker, Jr. of Lyme, CT died michael Scott; his mother, Isabella F. Born in Eagle Point, OR, he graduated Internal Auditors. on June 15, 1983. He was 63. S.:;ott; two daughters, Mrs. Marion Keisch from Munson Academy in Munson, MA. He was a member of the First Congre­ Born in New York, NY, he graduated and Mrs. Deborah Hirsch; his son, Frazier He received his B.A. degree from Trinity gational Church of Bloomfield, a member from The Salisbury School in Salisbury, G.; and six grandchildren. in 1938, and his M.Div. degree from Gen­ of the church choir for 40 years, and for­ CT. He attended Trinity with the Class of eral Theological Seminary in 1941. He was mer member of the church diaconate. He 1943 and was a member of Delta Upsilon ordained to the priesthood that same year. was past chairman of the music commit­ fraternity. JAMES HENDERSON, JR., 1937 He served in the diocese of Connecticut, tee, and former church financial secre­ He was a self-employed real estate bro­ James Henderson, Jr. of Chicago, IL and Massachusetts, Buffalo, NY and New York tary. ker and retired in 1978. Squam Lake, NH died on July 11, 1984. City. He was rector of St. Paul's Episco­ He was a member of the John Alden He was a member of the Black Hall Club, He was 68. pal Church on Nantucket from 1944 to Society of Duxbury, MA. Old Lyme; Delta Psi or St. Anthony Club Born in Spokane, WA, he graduated 1949. During this time he served on the He leaves his wife, Martha Jane McCloy in New York City, and a former member from St. Alban's School in Washington, school committee. Mann; two sons, F. Edward of Burlington, of the New London Country Club and Old D.C. He received his B.S. degree from After 35 years in the priesthood, he re- CT, and Jeffrey W. of Bloomfield, CT; two Lyme Country Cluh. Survivors include his wife, Elizabeth from Hopkins Grammar School in New sequently employed by Marine Office of West Hartford Friends Meeting. Reynolds Riker; a stepson, Dr. Ward R. Haven, CT. He received his B.S. degree America and the Chase Manhattan Bank She wrote and narrated two shows Maier of Belmont, MA; and two grand­ from Trinity in 1950. until 1962. Shortly after, he did free-lance sponsored by Connecticut Public Televi­ children. He was employed as an estimator and photography and writing. He had been vice sion entitled, "Alive and About" and "This building construction engineer by the president of Gordon's Gateway to Sports, is Connecticut." Fusco Amatruda Company before his re­ Ltd. since 1970. She leaves two daughters, Abi Dickson PHILIP SPAHN, 1944 tirement. Surviving are his wife, Margaret Can­ of Unalaska, AK, and Betsy of Cabin John, Philip Spahn of Belmont, VT died in an He had served on the Woodbridge Town field Young; a daughter, Louise B.; a son, MD. automobile accident in East Fishkill, NY Plan and Zoning Commission. William B., Jr., all of Greenwich, CT; and on December 17, 1983. He was 62. He is survived by a sister and several a sister, Katharine M. Bicket, of Liver­ Born in 1921 in New York, NY, he grad­ nieces and nephews. pool, England. uated from Rutland High School in Rut­ ESTELLE LAZINSK POLLACK land, VT. Before coming to Trinity, where M.A. 1969 he attended with the Class of 1944, he had BEN WARDE JENKINS, JR., 1951 FRANK W. LUBY, JR., 1955 Estelle L. Pollack of Bristol, CT died on been at the University of Richmond in Vir­ Ben W. Jenkins, Jr. of Plantation, FL Frank W. Luby, Jr. of Warwick, RI died June 3, 1984. g~ma. died on August 14, 1981. He was 51. on June 4, 1984. He was 50. Born in Colchester, CT, she lived in the After serving in the Army in the Pacific Born in Ashtabula, OH, he graduated Born in Norfolk, VA, he graduated from Hartford area most of her life. She grad­ in World War II, he worked for two Con­ from Lakewood High School in Lake­ Newton High School in Newton, MA. In uated from Central Connecticut State Col­ necticut newspapers: the Hartford Cour­ wood, OH. In 1951, he received his B.A. 1955, he received his B.A. degree from lege and received her master's from ant and the Bridgeport Herald. He also degree from Trinity, where he had been a Trinity, where he was a member of Delta Trinity in 1969. She taught at New Britain worked for a Hartford radio station. member of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity, the Kappa Epsilon fraternity. High School. From 1947 to 1959, he worked on the Senate, Medusa, Sophomore Dining Club, He was employed in sales by Union Car­ She was affiliated with the Temple Beth radio desk of United Press in New York WRTC and the freshman football and bide from 1957 to 1970. In 1970, he formed Israel, Hartford Mutual Society, B'nai and later joined the New York Telephone baseball teams. his own company, Luby Ltd. in Warwick, Brith and also volunteered at the Newing­ Company as a writer and editor. He served with the U.S. Navy from 1952 RI. ton Children's Hospital for many years. He retired after 22 years, the last spent to 1955. He served on the board of directors of She leaves her son, Robert J., of West as a spokesman on Long Island where he At the time of his death, he was em­ the Rhode Island Yacht Club and the War­ Hartford, CT; four sisters, and two grand­ was known as the "dean of public rela­ ployed as sales manager for Molded Rein­ wick Baseball League. He had been pres­ daughters. tions." forced Plastics in Fort Lauderdale, FL. ident of the Warwick Republican Club. He was one of the founders of the Press Surviving are his wife, Carol Pope Luby Club of Long Island, and last June he be­ of Warwick, RI; a daughter, Deborah of REV. SIDNEY WILMONT came the first public relations official on HENRY GEORGE THOMAS, JR., 1951 Warwick, RI; and a son, William K. of the Island to receive an award from the Durham, NC . GOLDSMITH, JR. Henry G. Thomas, Jr. of Hartford, CT Hon. 1963 club "for service to the organization and died on November 26, 1979. He was 54. The Rev . Sidney W. Goldsmith, Jr. died service to the media." Born in Hartford, CT, he graduated on April 5, 1983. He was from Bronxville, He leaves three sons, Michael of Glen from Bulkeley High School in that city. DR. THOMAS MARTIN KURTI, 1959 NY. Cove, NY, David of Sanford, ME, and He attended Trinity with the Class of Dr. Thomas M. Kurti of West Hartford, He received a B.A. from Williams Col­ Daniel of Saudi Arabia; four daughters, 1951. CT died on December 6, 1979. He was 42. lege in 1940 and an M.Div. and Hon. D.D. Deborah Rivituso and Naomi Spahn, both He was a Coast Guard veteran of World He entered Trinity with the Class of from the Virginia Seminary. In 1963, he of Hauppauge, NY, Beth Peck of Melrose, War!!. 1959 and received his B.A. and M.S. from was awarded an L.H.D. from Trinity. MA, and Anne Dunbar of Hicksville, NY; He was a member of the Hartford Middlebury College. He earned his medi­ In 1963, he served as rector and head­ and four grandchildren. County Fire Emergency Plan, the Con­ cal degree from McGill University Medical master of the Shattuck School in Fari­ necticut Advisory Council on Emergency School in Montreal, Canada. bault, MA and in 1965 was affiliated with Medical Service, the North Central Coun­ Until the time of his death he was a St. James Episcopal Church in Farming­ cil of Emergency Medical Service, the NICHOLAS ANGELO MARZIALO, radiologist at Hoffmann-LaRoche Re­ ton, CT. Most recently he was a consult­ Hartford County Fire Emergency Plan, search Laboratories in Nutley, NJ. 1945 ant for Church Pension Fund & Aff. in the Hartford Veterans Volunteer Fire­ His published book of verse, The Sea, Nicholas A. Marzialo of Manchester, CT New York City. men, the International Association of Fire The Land and The Heart, included a poem died on November 2, 1977. He was 54. He is survived by his mother; and a son, Chiefs, the New England Fire Chiefs As­ entitled "Meditation Upon This First Born in Hartford, CT, he graduated - James C. from Hartford Public High School. He at­ sociation, the Connecticut State Fire Week at Trinity College." tended Trinity with the Class of 1945. Chiefs Association, the Hartford Fire and He leaves a son, Daniel of Richardson, Subsequently, he attended the University Police Benevolent Association and was li­ TX; his mother, father, and brother, all of of Vermont and the University of Wiscon­ aison between the City of Hartford and West Hartford, CT. ARCHIBALD MULFORD WOODRUFF sin. In 1948, he received his M.D. degree the Research Triangle Institute. Hon. 1972 from Tufts Medical School. He interned at At the time of his death, he was assist­ Archibald M. Woodruff of Bloomfield, St. Francis Hospital in Peoria, IL, and ant chief of the Hartford Fire Depart- PETER FREDERICK VON STARCK, CT died on August 26, 1984. He was 72. began his residency at Manchester Mem­ ment. y 1963 Former president of the University of orial Hospital in 1950, before being called He is survived by his wife, Rosalie Shults Peter F. Von Starck of Center City, PA Hartford, Woodruff was born in Newark, into the Army where he served in Ger­ Thomas of Hartford, CT; two sons, Brian died on July 25, 1984. He was 42. NJ. He received a B.A. degree from Wil­ many for two years as a medical officer. of Warsaw, IN, and Barry of Hartford, He attended Episcopal Academy, Yale liams College in 1933 and a doctorate from In 1953, he was made a member of the CT; a daughter, Nancy Jean of Hartford, University and graduated from Trinity in Princeton in 1936. courtesy staff in general practice at CT; and a sister. 1963. While at Trinity he was a member He worked for the Prudential Insurance Manchester Memorial Hospital, in 1954 of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Company until 1950 and went on to teach was appointed assistant in obstetrics and While travelling in Europe he became a insurance and urban land studies at the in medicine, and in 1962, an associate in RICHARD IRVING AHERN, 1952 chefs apprentice in France and went on University of Pittsburgh. From 1959 to medicine at the Hospital. He was a mem­ Richard I. Ahern of Madrid, Spain died to operate a restaurant in the Bahamas. 1965 he was dean of the School of Govern­ ber of the American Academy of General on May 12, 1984. He was 55. Soon after returning to Philadelphia, he ment and International Affairs at George Practice. Born in New Rochelle, NY, he gradu­ was known as one of the area's leading Washington University. For the next five He served as Manchester's director of ated from Iona Prep School in that city. restaurateurs. In 1967, he opened La Pa­ years he was employed by the University health from 1953 until January, 1974, He received his B.A. degree from Trinity netiere - a classic, French restaurant of Hartford as provost and chancellor be­ when he was honored at a testimonial. The in 1952. hailed as Philadelphia's finest. In 1982, he fore becoming president during the tur­ Board of Directors cited the doctor at that At the time of his death, he was a vice hosted a reception for Philadelphia alumni bulent '60s and '70s. In 1972 he was time for his devoted service to the people president of PepsiCo. and parents at his restaurant. awarded an honarary Doctor of Humane of Manchester for 25 years and his service He leaves his wife, Michelle Ahern; five He is survived by his mother, and a Letters degree from Trinity. as health director for 20 years. daughters, Assumpta, Patricia, Alicia, Al­ brother. He was named to the directorship of He was also honored by Manchester legra and Tuohy; and a sister. several state and federal commissions Chapter of UNICO at its 1974 spring ball. dealing with land development and had He was a communicant of St. Bridget JANE BURGER CHENEY, M.A. 1961 published several articles in the field. Church and a member of the Manchester WILLIAM BEEKMAN YOUNG, 1952 Jane B. Cheney of West Hartford, CT He was president of the Connecticut Chapter of UN! CO. William B. Young of Greenwich died on died on June 11, 1982. She was 72. Conference of Independent Colleges and He leaves his wife, Mary Hickey Mar­ May 15, 1984. He was 57. Born in New York City, she received the World Affairs Center, trustee of the zialo of Manchester, CT; five sons, Mi­ Born in New York City, he graduated her master's degree from Trinity in 1961. Society for Savings, director of CG Fund chael J., Peter N., and Marc, all of from Trinity in 1952 and was a member She had been associated with the Chil­ Inc., president of the board of trustees of Manchester, CT, Richard P . and David; of Delta Psi fraternity and Trinity Nauti­ dren's Museum of Hartford since 1931 and the Watkinson School in Hartford and a three daughters, Mary and Adeline, both cal Association. served as its director from 1946 to 1968. member of the State Board of Higher Ed­ of Manchester, CT, and Nikki Uppling of During World War II he served in the The University of Hartford awarded her ucation. Willin1,rton, CT; and a brother. Army and was awarded an ETO Medal, an honorary doctorate in 1972. Surviving are his wife, Barbara Jane Victory Medal, Army of Occupation Medal Her many affiliations included the Ber­ Bestor Woodruff of Bloomfield, CT; four and a Letter of Commendation. muda Biological Station where she served sons, Nathan B.V. of Simsbury, CT, Ar­ FRANCIS PASQUALE MARTINO, He attended New York University as scientist and a member of the board of chibald M. of Albuquerque, NM, Paul B. 1950 Graduate School of Business Administra­ corporators, the Governor's Commission of Austin, TX, and Timothy R. of Grove­ Francis P. Martino of Woodbridge, CT tion and the American Institute of Bank­ on the Environment, the White House land, NY; and four grandchildren. died on March 24, 1984. He was 57. ing. In 1952 he began his banking career Conference on Children's Museums, the Born in Woodbridge, CT, he graduated with the Bank of New York and was sub- American Association of Museums and the lovember 2-4 The Trinity campus will be the place to be in New England on the first weekend in November. Whether your tastes run to art exhibits, theatrical entertainment, hotly contested Division Ill sports or the voices of the Trinity Pipes, you'll find it all - along with many of your former classmates - at the Bantam homecoming celebration. Make your plans now to come home to Hartford for the annual fall renewal. There's no better time than an autumn weekend in Connecticut.