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COLGATE
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THE OFFICERS:
Ralph M. Horton ’24, President
COLGATE
W illiam A. Kern ’27, First Vice-President
Clarence H. Twichell T 8, Vice-President
Ray Buchanan ’22, Vice-President
-y^ éu 4 P t4 V ¿ //eO J ^
G. Dewey Hynes ’25, Vice-President
Ernest F. Staub ’27, Vice-President
Everett D. Barnes ’22, Treasurer
Carlton O. M iller ’14, Executive Secretary
William H. Turner, Jr. ’50, Assistant Secretary
THE PUBLICATION COMMITTEE
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF COLGATE
UNIVERSITY ALUMNI CORPORATION
HAMILTON, NEW YORK
THE
CONTENTS
E. Donald Frick ’43, Chairman
H. Carlyle Millard ’26
Edmund C. Rice ’34
F.
Gordon Boyce ’39
Robert K. Otterbourg ’51
W . Stanley Holt, Jr. ’52
Howard O. Colwell ’53
1
Three Anniversaries, by H. D. Williams ’30
4
Presenting: Class of ’63, by R. B. Shirley ’44
5
Interviewing W orld’s Top Brass, by W. H. Stringer ’31
7
Thomas Iiams, Librarian, Dies
8
Young Man with a Mission
9
It All Depends on You
THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Carlton O. Miller ’14, Editor
F. Reed Alvord ’31, Managing Editor
W alter D. Splain ’49, Sports
Howard D. W illiams ’30
Stanley E. Smith ’49
10 The Idea of Freedom: 1959, by President Case
13
W. P. Rogers ’34 Elected Trustee
19
"Resourceful” Added to Raider Lexicon
23
Take Your Time!
Bruce G. Holran ’56
W illiam H. Turner, Jr. ’50
THE COVER
A detail from the crayon mural in
the dining room of the President's
House depicting the Thirteen Men
being greeted by Deacon Olmstead as
they gather for their first meeting
at his house in 1817. The artist
was the late Bill Breck who illus
trated the humorous classic of W orld
W ar I, "Dere Mable.”
Careers, Anyone?, 7 — Maroon Memos, 15 — Campus Affairs, 17 — Colgate
Away from Home; Successful Summer, 18 — Kerr Anniversary, 19 — New
Stands; Bowling Alleys Open in Reid Athletic Center, 21 — Flashes by
Classes, 22 — Vital Statistics, 29.
MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN ALUMNI COUNCIL
Colgate A lumni N ews is published seven times a year: October,
December, January, March, April, May and July. Entered as second class
matter at the Hamilton, N. Y., post office December 19, 1911, under Act
of Congress of March 7, 1879- Subscription price, $2.30; 50c per issue.
OCTOBER, 1959 — V olume XLIII — N umber 1
Colgate University Alumni Corporation
The Roster for 1959 - 1960
Officers of Alumni District Clubs
ALBANY
William F. McHugh '56, p
159 S. Lake Ave., Albany 8
Lamont F. Hodge ’97, vp
448 Clinton Ave., Albany 6
James G. Whitelaw *52, vp
Sheridan Village, Apt. 5-02
Schenectady 2
George Arakelian, HI ’56, vp
Brunswich Hills, Troy
Richard F. Lindstrom *49, st
105 McNutt Ave., Albany 12
Allison W. Vedder ’40, ssc
8 Mayfair Dr., Slingerlands
ATLANTIC CITY
Thomas L. Glenn ’27, ssc
11 N. Quincy Ave.
Margate City, N. J.
George Godfrey, s
112 E. Glenside Ave.
Linwood, N. J.
BALTIMORE, MD.
Carl N. Fuller '34, p
7 Southfield PI.
Baltimore 12
Robert M. Conner ’50, vp, t
Am. Sugar Refining Co.
P. O. Box 838, Baltimore 3
William T. Baker ’37, ssc
1405 Berwick Ave., Ruxton4
BERGEN COUNTY
William P. Major ’26, p
145 Central Ave.
Bergenfield, N. J.
Albert E. Sproul, Jr. ’49, vp, ssc
7 Georgian Ct.
Bergenfield, N. J.
Robert D. Scott '38, s
Old Woods Rd.
Saddle River
W. Craig Miller ’49, t
176 W. Ivy Lane
Englewood, N. J.
THE BERKSHIRES
(Pittsfield, Mass.)
Cyrus A. Henry, Jr. ’53, p
Limont Agency
Berkshire Life Ins. Co.
Pittsfield
Monroe B. England, Jr. '53, st
Kelly-Dietrich
Box 583, Pittsford
Henry L. Adams '20, ssc
484 Housatonic St.
Dalton
BOSTON, MASS.
Herbert C. Muther, Jr. ’46, p
51 Northgate Rd., Wellesley
William B. Saul ’45, 1st vp
Alcott Rd., Concord
Robert R. Churchill '43, 2 vp
Lexington Rd., Lincoln
M. Roy London, Jr. '45, st
109 Gainsborough St.
Boston 15
D. Stephen Thrall '22, ssc
The Nat. Cash Register Co.
537-539 Commonwealth Ave.
Boston 15
BROOKLYN
Arthur S. Rasi '42, p, ssc
139 Clinton St., Brooklyn
Franklyn J. Faske ’41, vp
475 Lenox Rd., Brooklyn 26
H. Lewis Wiener ’37, t
125 Lenox Rd., Brooklyn 26
BUFFALO
Richard W. Rupp ’41, p
21 New Amsterdam Ave.
Buffalo 16
Robert J. Hodgson '40, vp
Dudley, Stowe & Sawyer
620 M & T Bldg., Buffalo 2
George B. Cowper '54, s
217 Evergreen Dr.
Tonawanda
Roland G. Ewald ’33, t
162 Tremont Ave.
Kenmore 17
Wm. J. Fitzhenry, Jr. ’48, ssc
483 Crescent Ave. Buffalo 4
CENTRAL MOHAWK
VALLEY
Robert C. Williams ’43, p
27 Sixth Ave., Gloversville
Edward S. Lomanto ’51, st
175 S. Main St., Gloversville
A. Franklin Triumpho '37, ssc
105 Cliff St., Canajoharie
CHAUTAUQUA and
CATTARAUGUS COUNTY
Allen Short ’47, p, ssc
N. W. Mut. Life Ins. Co.
First Natl. Bank Bldg.
Jamestown
Robert J. Sullivan '32, vp
150 E. Fourth St., Dunkirk
Norman A. Linquest ’45, s
208 Van Buren St.
Jamestown
Neale W. Peck '41, t
Peck Memorials
90 Academy St., Westfield
CHICAGO
John E. McCrehan, Jr. '46, p
711 Wehrli Dr., Naperville
J. Raymond Broderick '49, vp
124 Richards Dr., Palatine
James J. Moore '33, vp
611 S. Berkley Ave.
Elmhurst
William M. Branch, Jr. '54, st
282 Graemere, Northfield
Stanley Whitford '19, ssc
5 Elizabeth Ct., Oak Park
(Cont. on Page 3)
Officers of The Corporation
President
Ralph M. Horton ’24
75 State St.
Albany 7, N. Y.
Regional Vice-Presidents
G. Dewey Hynes ’25
10 Crestmont Rd.
Montclair, N. J.
Vice-President
William A. Kern '27
10 Franklin St.
Rochester 4, N. Y.
Clarence H. Twichell '18
500 Hills Bldg.
Syracuse 2, N. Y.
Treasurer
Everett D. Barnes ’22
Hamilton, N. Y.
Ernest F. Staub '27
208 S. LaSalle St.
Chicago 4, 111.
Executive Secretary
Carlton O. Miller ’14
Hamilton, N. Y.
Assistant Secretary
William H. Turner, Jr. ’50
Hamilton, N. Y.
Directors of The Corporation
Term Ends 1960
Lewis W. Morse ’25
111 The Parkway
Ithaca, N. Y.
Walter E. Mallory, Jr. '32
Travelers Ins. Co.
147 Milk S t
Boston, Mass.
Asa F. Voak ’35
1919 E. 13th at Euclid
Cleveland 15, Ohio
William T. Jerome, III '41
1 Linden Lane
Fayetteville, N. Y.
Edward T. Dunn ’42
Springfield College
Springfield, Mass.
Term Ends 1961
Harold E. Ewald ’26
45 Pondfield Rd., W.
Bronxville 8, N. Y.
Morgan F. Bisselle ’29
133 Paris Rd.
New Hartford, N. Y.
Foster E. Goodrich ’33
22 Tekoa Ter.
Westfield, Mass.
Carl J. Kreitler ’35
205 Highland Ave.
Short Hills, N. J.
Allison W. Vedder '40
8 Mayfair Dr.
Slingerlands, N. Y.
Term Ends 1962
Anthony Meyer, Jr. '26
44 E. Hunter Ave.
Maywood, N. J.
F. Gordon Boyce ’39
Orchard St.
Brattleboro, Vt.
Alexander R. Chambers, Jr. ’43
35th St. & A.V.R.R.
Pittsburgh 1, Pa.
Walter F. Piebes ’50
177 Manhattan Ave.
Hawthorne, N. Y.
Ralph A. Jones ’52
224 Village Lane
Rochester 10, N. Y.
PAST PRESIDENTS
(Life Members)
William M. Parke ’00
25 Broadway
New York 4, N. Y.
Howard G. Stokes ’l l
Hamilton, N. Y.
L. Vincent Collings ’16
1000 Westchester Ave.
White Plains, N. Y.
Harold B. Day '28
American Broadcasting Co.
11 W. 67th St.
New York 23, N. Y.
D. Stephen Thrall ’22
Key to Abbreviations
Where no abbreviations are used, names listed are
those of key men in the district. To conserve space,
the addresses of men listed more than once are not
repeated.
p —President
t —Treasurer
vp—Vice-President
st —Secretary-Treasurer
s —Secretary
ssc—Chairman,
Student Selection Committee
Members of Committees of the Alumni Corporation
Executive Committee
Ralph M. Horton ’24, chm.
William A. Kern ’27
D. Stephen Thrall ’22
Harold B. Day ’28
Harold E. Ewald ’26
William T. Jerome, HI ’41
Morgan F. Bisselle '29
Finance Committee
Harold B. Day ’28, chm.
D. Stephen Thrall ’22
William A. Kern ’27
Publications Committee
E. Donald Frick ’43, chm.
Centredale 11, R. I.
H. Carlyle Millard ’26
114 Windsor PI.
Syracuse 10, N. Y.
Edmund C. Rice ’34
53 Stratford Rd.
Scarsdale, N. Y.
F. Gordon Boyce ’39
Robert K. Otterbourg ’51
100 Remsen St.
Brooklyn 1, N. Y.
W. Stanley Holt, Jr. '52
2 Beekman PL, Apt. 17-B
New York 22, N. Y.
Howard O. Colwell ’53
Exeter Lane
Wilton, Conn.
Nominating Committee
Harold E. Ewald ’26, chm.
Walter S. Beattie ’28
307 Robineau Rd.
Syracuse 7, N. Y.
Howard D. Williams ’30
6 W. Kendrick Ave.
Hamilton, N. Y.
Carl J. Kreitler ’35
Theodore E. Mulford ’41
109 Chestnut St.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Richard F. Lindstrom '49
105 McNutt Ave.
Albany 12, N. Y.
Walter F. Piebes '50
Maroon Citations Committee
Ernest R. Braun, Jr. ’21 (T)
825 Morewood Ave.
Pittsburgh 13, Pa.
Frank O’Hern ’23 (T)
1930 Park Ave., Apt. 9
San Jose, Calif.
Lewis G. Van Akin ’27 (AA)
Fuller & Smith & Ross, Inc.
666 Fifth Ave.
New York 19, N. Y.
Ralph M. Horton ’24 (EO)
Edward J. Lalor '38 (AC)
412 Lakewood Pkwy.
Snyder 21, N. Y.
James Dickinson ’39, chm (A)
Hamilton, N. Y.
G. Osgood Wales ’43 (A)
River St., R. R. 1
Norwell, Mass.
(A) Alumni Representative
(T) Trustee Representative
(AA) Alumni Awards
(AC) Athletic Coun. Repr.
(EO) Ex-Officio
Student Selection Committee
Committee on
Council
Alumni Service Committee
C. G. Hetherington ’16, chm.
Hamilton, N. Y.
K. A. McClinchie ’29, v-chm.
46 Madison Ave.
Kearny, N. J.
Rollin W. Thompson ’08
2632 Edgewood Rd.
Utica, N. Y.
Hadley K. Turner ’16
Turner & Cook, Inc.
Southfield, Mass.
Charles E. Glendening ’17
Ayer Bldg., W. Wash. Sq.
Philadelphia 6, Pa.
Wesley M. Cotterell '19
151 William St.
New York 38, N. Y.
William W. Wilson ’20
50 Roxbury Rd.
Garden City, L. I., N. Y.
Charles V. Day, Jr. ’24
165 Morris Ave.
Rockville Centre, L.I., N.Y.
Ernest F. Staub ’27
Herbert R. Welch, Jr. ’33
535 Shackamaxon Dr.
Westfield, N. J.
William C. Daley ’35
R. D. 3
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
William T. Baker '37
1405 Berwick Ave.
Ruxton 4, Md.
Edmund B. Case ’37
Theodore E. Mulford ’41
E. Donald Frick '43
Clarence H. Twichell ’18, chm.
David B. West ’18
130 Admiral Rd.
Buffalo 16, N. Y.
D. Stephen Thrall ’22
William A. Searle ’27
Room 313, Mayro Bldg.
Utica 2, N. Y.
Edward J. Leavitt ’29
Robert E. Kern ’31
209 Lisbon Ave.
Buffalo 15, N. Y.
William T. Jerome, HI ’41
Warren L. Ashmead ’42
William H. Geary ’48
Cromwell Printery Inc.
Church & Bleeker Sts.
Albany, N. Y.
F. Reed Alvord '31
Hamilton, N. Y.
Eugene T. Adams
Hamilton, N. Y.
Everett D. Barnes ’22
James F. Dickinson ’39
William F. Griffith '33
Hamilton, N. Y.
Lloyd L. Huntley '24
Hamilton, N. Y.
Howard L. Jones ’39
Hamilton, N. Y.
Carl A. Kallgren '17
Hamilton, N. Y.
Stanley E. Smith ’49
Hamilton, N. Y.
Carlton O. Miller ’14
William H. Turner, Jr. ’50
Legal Committee
Warren L. Ashmead ’42, chm.
Hamilton, N. Y.
Robert F. Isham ’12
81 Main St.
Lake Placid, N. Y.
Edward C. Rowe ’19
630 Fifth Ave.
New York 20, N. Y.
Warren M. Anderson ’37
34 Lathrop Ave.
Binghamton, N. Y.
David S. Williams ’39
Whalen, McNamee,
Crible & Nichols
75 State St.
Albany, N. Y.
Athletic Committee
Charles T. Hubbell ’18, chm.
931 Cloverhill Rd.
Wynnewood, Pa.
G. Dewey Hynes ’25
Howard A. Anderson ’53
40 Arrandale Rd.
Rockville Centre, L.I., N.Y.
Theodore E. Mulford '41
Walter F. Piebes ’50
Wellington Powell ’21, chm.
N. Y. Tel. Co., 140 West St.
New York 7, N. Y.
S. Bayard Colgate H’58, vc
355 Lexington Ave.
New York 16, N. Y.
L. Vincent Collings ’16, vc
Standard Vacuum Oil Co.
1000 Westchester Ave.
White Plains, N. Y.
C. Elwood Gates '15, dir.
Hamilton, N. Y.
Philo W. Parker '12
120 E. End Ave.
New York 28, N. Y.
Carlton O. Miller ’14
Lionel D. Edie *15
530 Fifth Ave.
New York 36, N. Y.
J. Maxwell Fassett ’18
55 Liberty St.
New York 5, N. Y.
H. Hastings Reddall ’18
Beaver Dam Rd.
Brookhaven, L.I., N.Y.
Roy D. Wooster-’21
350 Madison Ave.
New York 17, N. Y.
Clinton W. Blume '22
588 Fifth Ave.
New York "*19, N. Y.
Robert A. Jones ’22
Guarantee Trust Co.
140 Broadway
New York 15, N. Y.
Thomas J. Moloney ’22
Aetna Life Ins. Co.
200 E. 42nd St.
New York 17, N. Y.
Stuart N. Updike '24
220 E. 42nd St.
New York 17, N. Y.
Horace P. Bromfield ’25
Chemical Corn Ex. Bank
165 Broadway
New York 15, N. Y.
Richard F. Mangano ’31
Associated Hospital Service
370 Lexington Ave.
New York 16, N. Y.
Wilbur N. Bingham ’33
Dun and Bradstreet, Inc.
99 Church St.
New York 8, N. Y.
John R. Fritts ’35
F. A. Owen Publishing Co.
9 Rockefeller Plaza
New York 20, N. Y.
James C. Cleveland ’41
New London, N. H.
Richard J. FitzMaurice ’44
Batten, Barton, Durstine
& Osborn, Inc.
383 Madison Ave.
New York 17, N. Y.
George H. Estabrooks
Hamilton, N. Y.
Stanley N. Kinney
Hamilton, N. Y.
Committee on Reunions
Walter C. Gumaer ’29, chm.
10 S. Hills Rd.
New Hartford, N. Y.
Lamont F. Hodge ’97
448 Clinton Ave.
Albany 6, N. Y.
Anthony Meyer, Jr. ’26
James C. Blanchard, Jr. ’32
365 Hillside PI.
South Orange, N. J.
Woolsey M. Wheeler ’34
20 Overlook Rd., R. D.
Chatham, N. J.
Thomas B. Campbell ’37
40 N. Van Dien Ave.
Ridgewood, N. J.
George C. Godfrey ’48
112 E. Glenside Ave.
Linwood, N. J.
James A. Cormack ’49
37 Mali Dr., N.
Plainfield, N. J.
A lum ni
Make New Colgate Friends,
Attend your Club’s meetings.
D istrict Clubs Committee
!/Asa F. Voak *35, chm.
Lewis W. Morse ’25
Alexander R. Chambers, Jr. ’43
Ralph A. Jones '52
Allison W. Vedder ’40
Representatives on Joint Boards
Alumni Trustees
Harold B. Day ’28
Kex Clements ’26
625 Montgomery Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Orrin G. Judd ’26
655 Madison Ave.
New York 21, N. Y.
Ernest F. Staub ’27
Frank O’Hern ’23
William H. Geyer ’42
272 Highland Ave.
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Development Council
Ralph M. Horton ’24, p.
Roy T. Miles ’22, af chm
14 Somerset St.
Boston, Mass.
Carlton O. Miller ’14, es.
Athletic Council
Edward J. Lalor ’38
W. Thomas Dodge *27
450 Seventh Ave.
New York 1, N. Y.
Wesley M. Cotterell ’19
Ernest H. Neill ’40
138 Overlook Ter.
Bloomfield, N. J.
Alumni Inter-Fraternity Council
Officers
Michael Stramiello, Jr. ’30, p
110 E. 42nd St.
New York 17, N. Y.
John P. Miles *34, vp
806 Loew Bldg.
Syracuse 2, N. Y.
Oran B. Stanley, s
Hamilton, N. Y.
Barr S. Morris '50, t
5 Ten Eyck Ave.
Albany 9, N. Y.
Club Officers
(Cont. from Page 1)
CINCINNATI-DAYTON
J. Frederic Martin ’39, p, ssc
8276 Constance Ln.
Brentwood Village
Cincinnati 31
James W. Cochran ’47, s
321 Compton Rd.
Cincinnati 15
CLEVELAND, OHIO
William J. Vesley ’48, p
2171 Chatfield Dr.
Cleveland Heights 6
Arthur E. Neubert ’41, vp
17427 Shelburne Rd.
Cleveland 18
David D. Kurtz ’54, s
18250 Shelburne Rd.
Shaker -Heights
J. George Furey ’46, t
29550 Edgedale Rd.
Pepper Pike 24
William C. Daley ’35, ssc
R. D. 3, Chagrin Falls
CONNECTICUT VALLEY
(Hartford)
George H. Barton ’49, p
146 South St., Rockville
Charles K. Oaks, Jr. ’48, vp
15 Cottage Ave.
West Hartford 7
Norman F. Sayers ’40, st
155 John Peel Rd., R. D. 2
West Simsbury
Clayton S. Parsons '33, ssc
99 Westmont, W. Hartford 7
Executive Committee
J. Curtiss Austin
Hamilton, N. Y.
William H. Geyer *42
272 Highland Ave.
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Clarence H. Twichell *18
500 Hills Bldg.
Syracuse 2, N. Y.
DALLAS, TEXAS
Douglas A. Bly ’48
3509 Harvard Ave., Dallas 5
Herbert P. Ferris '35
10323 Cromwell Dr.
Dallas 29
DENVER, COLO.
H. Preston Smith '46, p
428 Humbolt, Denver 3
Eugene R. Eagan ’50, vp
2301 Moline, Aurora 8
Edward R. Carrell ’56, s
760 Cragmore St., Denver 29
John M. Casson ’50, t
2905 Depew St., Denver 15
William P. Waggener ’51, ssc
845 Gaylord St., Denver 6
DETROIT, MICH.
John M. LeFevre ’41, p
271 Fairfax Ave.
Birmingham
Kenneth A. Forward ’45, vp
1751 Glenwood Blvd.
Lathrup Village
George F. Skiff ’50, s
CBS-TV Network
932 Fisher Bldg., Detroit 2
Theodore S. Stacy, Jr. *51, ssc
913 Federal Bldg.
Detroit 26
ERIE, PA.
Conrad A. Pearson ’39
23 W. 10th St., Erie
Cyril S. Sullivan ’31
4027 Farkside, Erie
John S. Chaffee ’36
820 Sassafras St., Erie
Robert R. Wellmon ’32
311 Seminole Dr., Erie
FINGER LAKES
Clyde C. Monroe, Jr. ’52, p
109 S. Fulton St.
Philip R. Robinson *44, vp
19 N. Main St., Moravia
Richard A. Gleason ’54, st
36 Standard Ave., Auburn
William K. Young ’29, ssc
131 S. Seward Ave., Auburn
GLENS FALLS
Victor J. Hazard ’41, vp
198 Lake Ave., Saratoga Sp.
Homer P. Dearlove '34, vp, ssc
11 N. Oak St., Hudson Falls
Darwin E. Leland ’26, vp
66 Sheridan St., Glens Falls
Ernest C. Higgins ’42, st
21 Pine St., Glens Falls
Walter P. Reichert ’24, ssc
18 Coolidge Ave., Glens Falls
GOLD COAST
(Fort Lauderdale)
W. Howard Allen ’33, p
1606 N. E. 18th Ave.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
John P. Friedrich ’52, st
First National Bank
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Gordon B. Bonfield, Jr. *50, p
1554 Groton Rd.
East Grand Rapids 6
John B. McMullen *31, ssc
601 Mich. Nat. Bank Bldg.
Grand Rapids 2
Lloyd J. Colenback, Jr. *50, st
Republic Steel Corp.
1001 Mich. Nat. Bank Bldg.
Grand Rapids
HAWAII
Frederick P. Whittemore ’44, p
Cooke Trust Co. Ltd.
926 Fort St., Honolulu 5
Richard C. Damon *50, vp
4947 Kalanianaole, Honolulu
Keep abreast of progress
at Colgate
Attend meetings of your
District Club
Philip H. Ching ’52
1743 B Malanai St.
Honolulu 14
K. F. Lum ’18, ssc
2485 E. Manoa Rd.
Honolulu 14
ITHACA-CORTLAND
Gordon L. Hewitt ’42, p, ssc
Hewitt Brothers, Inc.
Locke
Lewis W. Morse ’25, vp, ssc
111 The Parkway, Ithaca
JERSEY SHORE
(Monmouth, Ocean and
Middlesex Counties)
Erwin R. Wilkinson, Jr. *51» p
20 Rutgers Rd., Parlin
Ray C. Hinman, Jr. ’51, vp
16 Maple Hill Dr.
Larchmont
Felix Turtur, HI *40, vp
69 Princeton Rd.
Fair Haven
Walter L. Rathbun ’32, vp
River Rd., Rumson
Warren H. Davis ’51, st
34 Winchester Dr.
New Shrewsbury
KANSAS CITY
Peter W. Popenoe '50, p
8515 W. 68 Ter., Merriam
Gilbert G. La Bar ’22, ssc
2204 W. 49th St.
Kansas City 12
LONG ISLAND
Gustave W. Raitz ’49, p
3925 Mill Rd., Baldwin
Wilson A. Borkhuis ’40, vp
85 Maple Ave., Floral Park
M. Edwin Birkins, HI *50, s
Wood Lane, Lattingtown
Robert M. Perry ’43, t
Meadowfield Lane
Glen Cove
William W. Wilson ’20, ssc
50 Roxbury Rd.
Garden City
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
John H. Paige *30, p, ssc
722 N. Broadway
Milwaukee 2
Robert J. O’Neill *34, st
2526 Alta Louise Pkwy.
Brookfield
NASHVILLE, TENN.
Bunn S. Rhea ’50, p
2301 Abbott Martin Rd.
Nashville
Robert L. Stevenson *40, vp
98 W. Bendel Circle
Memphis
W. Russell Reed '27, s
4106 Lone Oak Rd.
Nashville
NORTHERN NEW JERSEY
Donald E. Freud ’51, p
17 Mt. Vernon Ave., Summit
Douglas F. Price *52, vp
2 Fairfield St., Montclair
Charles R. Kimber ’53, vp
60 D Brookdale Gardens
Bloomfield
Edward J. Winslow *56
80 Southgate Rd.
Murray Hill
Jay T. MacMillan *54, t
96 Wildwood Ave.
Montclair
Herbert R. Welch, Jr. ’33, ssc
535 Shackamaxon Dr.
Westfield
Luncheon Club
of Newark, N. J.
Warren H. Davis ’51, p
34 Winchester Dr.
New Shrewsbury
Stewart D. Woolley ’49, s
Newark College of Eng.
323 High St., Newark 2
NUTMEG
(New Haven)
Ericsson C. Barton ’27, p
21 Grand St., Seymour
Carl A. Kallgren, Jr. ’43, vp
R. D. 1, West Redding
Burton G. Lowe ’39, vp
1216 Wolf Hill Rd., Cheshire
Bruce E. Dillingham ’46, vp
252 Lakeview Dr.
Fairfield
Deryck C. Clark ’54, s
186 Seaton Rd., Stamford
H. Reid Sterrett, Jr. '39, ssc
1695 Ridge Rd.
North Haven
ONEIDA-SHERRILL
Joseph M. Austin ’36, p
186 Skinner Rd.
Kenwood Sta., Oneida
J. James Cox ’43, st
319 Seneca St., Oneida
Cornelius M. Milmoe *30, ssc
221 Cottage PL, Oneida
PHILADELPHIA, FA.
Frank C. McCown, HE ’50, p
Lantern Lane
Leopard Lake, Berwyn
John Cable ’52, vp
506 Berkley Rd., Narberth
Walter Chapel ’39, s
221 Warren Ave., Berwyn
John S. Maxon, Jr. ’43, t
29 Rancocas Blvd.
Rancocas Woods, Mt. Holly
Albert S. Womelsdorf, Jr. ’55,t
2nd Lt. U.S.A.F., A.M.R.
Box 293 Laughlin AFB
Del Rio, Texas
Charles E. Glendening ’17, ssc
Ayer Bldg., W. Wash. Sq.
Philadelphia 6
PHOENIX, ARIZ.
Richard T. Turner ’19
The American Institute for
Foreign Trade
Box 191, Phoenix
Charles F. Teetsel ’24
147 E. Claremont, Phoenix
Augustus F. Elias ’29, st
19 E. Manning St.
Providence
Madison B. Cole ’32, ssc
5 Tiffany Circle
Barrington
ROCHESTER
Paul H. Redfield ’48, p
83 Catalpa Rd.
Rochester 17
Ralph A. Jones ’52, vp, ssc
56 Rowley, Rochester 7
Roger B. Goodrich ’38, s
137 Maybrooke Rd.
Rochester 18
Robert T. Searing, Jr. ’51, t
3210 Elmwood Ave.
Rochester 18
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Thomas N. De Pew '38, p, ssc
7365 Kingsbury St.
St. Louis 5
Leonard D. Haertter ’21, ssc
John Burroughs School
755 S. Price Rd.
Clayton
SAN FRANCISCO
Richard A. Gardner ’48, p
630 Third St.
San Francisco 7
Robert A. Blakeslee '29, vp
15 Acorn Way, Kentfield
Erik O. Stahl ’37, s
5 Pinto Ave.
San Francisco 27
James G. Clover '31, ssc
843 Evergreen Ave.
San Leandro
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
(Los Angeles)
John B. Herrmann ’45, p
9510 Farm Ave., Downey
George D. Munger, Jr. ’44, vp
3678 Wrightwood Dr.
North Hollywood
C. Bennett Jackson ’29, ssc
4834 Tocaloma Lane
La Canada
George M. Carroll ’33, s
3752 Lemon Ave.
Long Beach 7
Hyle F. Webb '43, t
1036 Encino St.
Arcadia
SOUTHERN TIER
(Elmira, Corning, Bath)
James C. Graner ’45, p
Reynolds, Cramer
& Donovan
243 Lake St., Elmira
George E. Schott ’42, vp
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Elmira Bank & Trust Co.
T. Frederick Remington ’41, p
150 Lake St., Elmira
Hugh W. Gregg ’21, ssc
The Pittsburgh Press
14 Elm St., Corning
Pittsburgh 30
Ernest R. Braun, Jr. ’51, vp
CENTRAL NEW YORK
315 S. Pasadena Dr.
(Syracuse)
Pittsburgh 15
Elving C. Nordmark ’45, p
Donald E. Hook ’50, st
Lakeview Dr.
Hilvue Lane, Pittsburgh 37
Fayetteville
mes S. McKain, Jr. ’46, ssc
William A. Farrell ’47, vp
4833 Perrysville Rd.
934 E. Willow St.
Pittsburgh 29
Syracuse 3
RHODE ISLAND
Robert S. Hillers ’51, s
Carroll M. McLoughlin '49, p
110 Ridgewood Dr.
219 Benefit St.
N. Syracuse
Providence 3
Irving C. Harney, Jr. ’52, t
Robert S. Leaper '48, vp
216 Stratford St.
124 Skylark Dr., Gienshaw
Syracuse 10
Elwood D. Hollister, Jr. ’36, ssc
216 S. Warren St.
Syracuse 2
TOLEDO, OHIO
Carl H. Kent, Jr. ’28, p
50 Canterbury Ct.
Ottawa Hills, Toledo 6
Richard D. Stichter '50, s, t, ssc
2908 Barrington Dr.
Toledo 6
TRIPLE CITIES
(Binghamton, Johnson City,
Endicott)
G. Morgan Berry '34, p
65 Crestmont Rd.
Binghamton
Frank J. Angeline ’56, vp
603 Church St., Endicott
Vincent P. Vetrano '50, st
2818 Yale St., Endwell
Howard P. Griffin ’13, ssc
151 Front St., Binghamton
Theodore E. Mulford '41
109 Chestnut St.
Binghamton
UTICA-ROME
Thomas R. Dockrell ’49, p
72 College St., Clinton
Roger H. Williams ’39, vp
702-4 First Nat. Bank Bldg.
Utica
Raymond E. Humann ’42, s
12 Woodlawn Ave., E., Utica
Hugh C. Jones ’49, t
Stanwix Mounted Route
Rome
Rollin W. Thompson *08, ssc
2632 Edgewood Rd., Utica
WASHINGTON
Fred B. Rhodes, Jr. ’36, p
717 Albee Bldg., 1426 G. St.
Washington 5
Perry J. Stevenson ’14, vp, ssc
3506 Quesada St., N. W.
Washington 15
Norman L. Smith '49, st
R. D. 2, McLean, Va.
William Anderson, Jr. ’50, vp
1801 S. Stafford St.
Arlington, Va.
Edwin S. Marlow '34, vp
4101 Everett St.
Kensington, Md.
WESTCHESTER COUNTY
Alan C. Egler ’51, p
Hudson View Rd.
Shrub Oak
Harold C. Heaslip ’52, vp, ssc
14 Leewood Circle
Tuckahoe
Otis P. Hutchins ’54, s
75 Stone Ave., Ossining
James W. Cheatham ’54, t
W. Side Rd., Woodbury
WILKES-BARRE
SCRANTON
John T. Griffith '25, p
832 Miners Nat. Bank Bldg.
Wilkes-Barre
David E. Smith ’39, st
194 Horton St.
Wilkes-Barre
Kenneth F. Lee ’55, ssc
88 Old River Rd.
Wilkes-Barre
Colgate University Cluh
4 W. 43rd St., New York City
New Officers will be elected at Annual meeting,
third Thursday in October
James F. Jones ’34, p
70 Kenilworth Rd.
Mountain Lakes, N. J.
William B. S. Laurie ’46, t
R. D. 2., Newtown, Pa.
Thomas J. Moloney ’22, vp
Aetna Life Ins. Co.
200 E. 42nd St.
New York 17
Otis P. Hutchins ’54, chm
Membership Committee
75 Stone Ave. Ossining
Joel J. Parker ’54, s
11 Field Ct., Bronxville
Richard F. Mangano ’31, chm
House Committee
151 E. 83rd St. New York 28
Your District Club Officers
are working for you and Colgate.
They need and solicit your help.
Attend your Club Meetings.
Crayon-on-cloth mural depicting first meeting of The Thirteen at the Olmstead House
Three Anniversaries
by H oward D. W illiams ’30, University Archivist
1959 marks three signifi
cant anniversaries for Colgate Uni
versity—the 140th of our first charter,
and of the decision to locate in Hamilton,
and the 40th of the founding of the
Alumni Corporation. In the hustle and
bustle of beginning another academic
year and a football schedule under a new
coach, we may well pause to think back
to these momentous events.
Hardly had the Thirteen Men, meet
ing at Deacon Jonathan Olmstead’s on
September 24, 1817, completed their
founding of the Baptist Education Society
of the State of New York when some of
them took steps to get a charter from the
State Legislature. The Society, the agency
which established and, to 1846, main
tained the institution fated to become
Colgate University, at first had no legal
standing. Hence the necessity for incor
poration to enable it to acquire, hold and
dispose of real estate and other property
which might be hopefully expected from
generous donors.
The seemingly routine procedure for
getting favorable legislation has elements
of drama and suspense which have been
all but forgotten. The chief protagonists
were Deacon Ebenezer Wakely of Pitcher,
Assemblyman from Chenango County,
and his colleague, General Erastus Root
of Delhi, Delaware County. Wakely, one
T
he year
of the pioneer settlers of his community,
a judge and a supervisor, a Baptist leader,
and a staunch friend of the infant Society,
presented its petition for a charter and
served as chairman of the special com
mittee of the Assembly appointed to rec
ommend appropriate action. Root, a
Dartmouth alumnus, was a lawyer and
had already served three terms in Con
gress. A gigantic and uncouth man,
somewhat dissipated, logical, eloquent,
keen-witted and bitingly sarcastic, he
could be a dreaded opponent or a wel
come ally, especially since he had great
influence as a leader of the majority po
litical party.
Deacon Wakely, by committee request,
drew up the charter bill and presented
it to the Assembly, where it had the
routine first and second readings and was
referred to the Committee of the Whole.
On hearing repeatedly that the General
had sworn that the measure should be de
feated, the Deacon called on him one
evening to attempt to win him over.
Finding him adamant in his conviction
that religious organizations had no need
for charters, Wakely asserted that the bill
would pass and left.
The next morning when the Assembly
met as the Committee of the Whole, the
Speaker asked Root to take the chair
which meant that, if he accepted, he
would be eliminated from debate. To
Wakely’s astonishment and relief, the
General, after a slight hesitation, went
forward to preside. As the Deacon ex
plained and defended the bill, he noted
Root’s scowls, but when it came up for
action it passed without opposition. At
the third reading, the General contented
himself with voting in the negative and
the charter was accepted by a vote of 62
to 35. Wakely wrote years later that he
never knew whether the Speaker called
Root to the chair by design or a watchful
providence intervened. The Senate, after
careful discussion, passed the bill and it
became law on March 5, 1819.
Two provisions of the charter are
worthy of note. One prohibited the So
ciety from making any rule or regulation
"affecting the rights of conscience.” This
guarantee of moral and intellectual free
dom President Roosevelt reminded us of
in his Charter Day letter in 1944. The
second limited the Society’s property to
an amount whose annual income should
not exceed $5,000. How times have
changed! In 1842 this restriction was
raised to $10,000.
The decision to locate the Sock
school in Hamilton came only after two
successive Trustee committees had thor
oughly investigated the possibilities of
seven Central New York villages—El-
The Reverend John Peck, right, only trustee
listed in the 1819 charter for whom a portrait
survives. It w as painted in 1838 by John Wilkie,
an itinerant artist, at nearby New Woodstock,
where Mr. Peck w as serving as pastor of the
Baptist Church
■
I I
t ^
mm
■11188
Colgate's first building, below, w as erected on
Hamilton Street by the citizens of the village at
a cost of $3,532.72. A stone structure, 36 by
64 feet, it contained both classrooms and living
accommodations for 40 students.
It w as used
from 1823 to 1827, when the present West Hall
on the newly-acquired campus w as completed
m
M l"
' »
Right, first seal used by the Baptist Education
Society on diplomas and legal documents. De
signed initially for a Theological Seminary in
New York City, it w as adopted for the new in
stitution when that seminary w as merged with
ours in 1826
bridge, Throopsville, Fabius, Sangerfield, Peterboro, Skaneateles and Hamil
ton. They considered especially climate
soil, accessibility, economic conditions
and the state and prospects of the local
Baptist Church in each.
Finally, on November 3, 1819, at
Peterboro, the Board chose Hamilton,
whose residents agreed to provide tem
porary quarters by the following May, a
permanent building costing $3,500
within four years, and $2,500 for stu
dent board to be paid in five
equal annual installments. The tem
porary quarters were a third story con
structed over the Hamilton Academy
which stood on the southwest corner of
Broad and West Pleasant Streets. The
permanent building, 36 by 64 feet, a
three story stone edifice which resem
bled the later West Hall and stood on
the east side of the first block of Ham
ilton Street, was ready in 1823.
Scarcely had the institution begun pro
ducing graduates when some of them and
other supporters formed a Society of
Alumni and Friends in 1825. Though
this group and its successors were useful
in channeling funds and students to Alma
Mater, it was not until October 10, 1919,
that a genuinely efficient mechanism
came into being, the Colgate Alumni
Corporation. As part of the Centennial
Celebration then in progress and with the
leadership of George W. Cobb ’94,
Raymond E. Brooks ’06 and others, Col
gate men at a dinner in a big tent set
up between the Ad Building and the
present Faculty Club enthusiastically
launched the new organization. Its found
ers saw it as a means for developing an
active and enduring alumni interest in
the University’s affairs. The forty years
since the Centennial abundantly show the
organization’s effectiveness in realizing
these aims.
Vision and confidence in the future of
this University characterized the men who
set up these three milestones 140 and 40
years ago and history had justified what
they did. We, as beneficiaries, now have
our obligations that our successors in their
time come into a Colgate heritage undi
minished in strength and value.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
raw ®i amata ironsm ,
By the 1850's, when this picture w as made,
the institution had become Madison University
and w as recovering from a bitter controversy
which nearly wracked it to pieces over an
attempt to remove it to Rochester. East Hall,
on the left, w as erected in 1834, partly by
student labor, and like West, from stone from
the campus quarry. The little building to the
right w as called the "Cottage Edifice" and
served variously as boarding hall and steward's
quarters and for classrooms.
Students com
prised the "grounds crew" in the fifties, white
washing buildings, landscaping and maintaining
the grounds
i t ITAWILTON, WADKOX OOUKTr, X. Y-
The cramped auditorium in West Hall led to the
construction of the Hall of Alumni and Friends,
right in picture at right, in the early 1860's;
its cornerstone carries the proud inscription
"Quod conamur perficimus," (We complete what
we attempt). The top floor contained a large
auditorium used for Commencement and other
public occasions until about 1900.
Below, Madison changed its name to Colgate
University in 1890. Few know that the move not
only did not have the endorsement of the Col
gate family but that a militant minority led
by Dr. P. B. Spear vigorously opposed it on
the grounds that tossing tradition to the winds
was "uncalled for, hazardous and unwise"
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
3
Presenting: the Class of ’63
Sixty per cent ranked in upper quarter;
academic potential above national average;
class won 777 varsity athletic awards
by R obert B. Shirley ’44, Director of Admissions
everal years ago, in the Alumni
News, Dean William F. Griffith ’33
wrote:
"Colgate continues to believe that its
province is the 'Whole Man.’ In the
selection of an entering class, evidence of
character and scholastic competence is the
most important factor, but not the only
consideration. Attention is also given to
the candidate’s record of citizenship in
his high school and community, to the
nature and extent of his participation in
activities (athletic and non-athletic); to
his personality, health and his interest in
an education in general, and at Colgate in
particular.”
In the belief that this is a sound phi
losophy, special efforts were made to ad
here to these principles in the selection
of the Class of 1963, potentially a great
class.
S
Citizenship and character
attested by alumni
Realizing that alumni should be aware
not only of admissions policy, but also
of the effectiveness of its application, we
are pleased to present the Class of 1963,
a group of men whose records of citizen
ship and character have been attested by
hundreds of alumni.
The record of academic achievement
compiled by members of ’63 is admirable,
60 per cent of them ranking in the upper
25 per cent of their classes at graduation
and 90 per cent having placed them
selves in the upper half of their classes at
the entire secondary level. More than
200 received academic honors at gradua
tion. Their academic potential, as de
4
termined by tests of the College En
trance Examination Board, is well above
the national average.
This is a fine record, but it represents
only one element of the admissions cri
teria. Elected offices of responsibility in
school government were held by 236
members of the class, while 234 of them
were designated class officers.
Interscholastic varsity athletic awards
won by members of the Class of 1963
number 777. Letters in football were
awarded to 136; in baseball, to 208; in
basketball, 87; in track and cross-coun
try, 108; in hockey, 21; in golf, 19; in
swimming and wrestling, 14; in lacrosse,
8; and many in other sports.
Significant participation by two-thirds
of i the members of the class has been
registered in publications, musical organi
zations, community service groups, and
religious organizations. A third or more
of the group have participated effective
ly and with merit in the Boy Scouts of
America, debating and dramatics. A va
riety of other significant activities is rep
resented by more than half the class.
Relatives of Colgate alumni in the
freshman class include 46 fathers, 24
brothers, 24 cousins, 22 uncles, and two
grandfathers, with a total of 123 of the
members of the class being related to
Colgate alumni.
Citizens from half of the states in the
Union are represented, as well as sev
eral from foreign countries. Nearly twothirds of the freshmen graduated from
public high schools, and the remaining
third terminated their secondary educa
tion at independent schools.
One hundred and twenty-six freshmen,
approximately one-third of the class,
were granted scholarships. Of this group,
21 were designated Alumni War Me
morial Scholars: ■
National
Brennan, John Clayton
Lacona
East, Maurice Alden
Trinidad, Colo.
Hillstrom, Roger Allan
Jamestown
Jackson, Richard Glacken
Buffalo
Johnson, Keith Robert
Omaha, Neb.
Kresge, Kerry Lynn
Newark, N. J.
Leighton, Barry
Oyster Bay
Magro, Alexander Francis Dallas, Texas
Raabe, Daniel Stauffer, Jr.
Yonkers
Regional
Burleigh, William Mark
Skaneateles
Cloney, Richard Morgan
Clifton, Va.
Davidson, William Ellis, Jr. Solon, Ohio
Depelteau, Thomas George Adams, Mass.
Hawley, David Lee
Watertown
Hutton, Edward Jeremy Hillsdale, N. J.
Leatherwood, Thomas Oscar
Granada Hills, Calif.
McNanamy, Thomas James, II
Clark, N. J.
Matrazzo, Anthony Charles
Braddock, Pa.
Sanders, Walter Ernest
McLean, Va.
Tangalos, William
Jamestown
Williams, Robert Douglas E. Northport
Alumni help invaluable
in selecting class
No small responsibility for the crea
tion of this class lies with alumni. In
deed, without the assistance of Alumni
Student Selection Chairmen and their
committee members, the work of the Of
fice of Admissions would be seriously
handicapped. We earnestly seek to
strengthen the relationship between this
office and the Alumni Committees.
Because of seriously increasing de
mands on the services of the Office of
Admissions (for example: 220 more ad
missions interviews were conducted on
campus during the last several months
than in any previous comparable period),
(Continued on page 9)
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
I
/
Interviewing the
World’s top Brass
In 100 days “Bill” Stringer 931
visits twenty-six countries and meets
face-to-face with twenty-one
presidents or prime ministers
by TFilliam H. Stringer ’31
OF Americans are travel
ling here and there on this criss
crossed globe of ours. A Colgate ex
change student was living in Moscow
last winter. But not everyone undertakes
to circumnavigate the globe in 100 days,
fly on 24 airlines, visit 26 countries, and
interview 21 presidents or prime minis
ters.
That was the assignment handed The
Christian Science Monitor's chief photog
rapher and me in late 1958. Let me try
to sort out a few impressions:
First of all, the days of hardship travel
are over. One doesn’t have to make
like Stanley in search of Dr. Livingston.
You may be flying over the rugged
mountains of Burma or the green carpet
of Africa’s rain forests. But aloft a friendly stewardess is serving you an edible
lunch on a plastic tray. And like as not
you’re flying a smooth Viscount, if not
a Boeing jet 707 — not the beat-up little
DC-3 of former years.
When you touch down at Rangoon, or
Delhi, or Djakarta, of course, you may
undertake to travel up-country by jeep
and leave air-conditioned hotels far be-
A
. (
! !
, .
f
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5 I
. |
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[.
a ■
s
f
s
lot
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
"Bill" Stringer '31 and his photographer strolling before the Kremlin in
typical Hamilton weather
hind. I’m just saying that the amen
ities have crept into tourism, even in
Asia-Africa.
But let me hastily add that no one has
succeeded in simplifying customs pro
cedure, particularly in countries jealous of
their new rights and sharply security-con
scious. What vast variety (and monot
ony) mankind has devised for checking
passports and visas, inspecting baggage
and ascertaining how many rubles, rupees,
or Egyptian pounds one is carrying in, or
out, of the country. Significantly Mos
cow inspects one’s papers, clippings and
notebooks far more thoroughly than the
clothing one carries. Probably checking on
subversive literature!
A second observation is that it wasn’t
easy to nail down 21 interviews with top
personages and locate them precisely and
in geographic order on a three-month
travel calendar. Embassies in Washing
ton might transmit homeward urgent ap
proval for the Monitor mission. But when
I arrived in some capitals, a month later,
the interview still wasn’t set up. And
though usually the greatest goodwill was
displayed, like as not the interview was
granted on the last morning of the last
day.
W e had our little adventures. In
Djakarta Mr. Converse and I interviewed
President Sukarno at the airport as he
was about to leave for a rest holiday in
Bali. He gave personal permission for
photographs. But after his plane had
departed, an airport security guard want
ed to confiscate all of Mr. Converse’s
film, fearing that the airport itself—a
forbidden subject, with a lot of Soviet
(Continued on next page)
Bill Stringer '31 is Washington Bureau
Chief for the CHRISTIAN SCIEN CE M ONI
TOR. Last winter he and a photographer
traveled 30,000 miles interviewing the
leading political figure in each of twentyfive nations. He asked two basic ques
tions: W hat is your country's essential
individual role in world affairs? What is
the most encouraging domestic develop
ment now underway in your country?
Based on some of his experiences, the
following article w as written especially
for the NEWS. "Summit Roundup," his
collection of revealing portraits of the
world's leaders, has just been published
by Longmans, Green Co.
*
jet fighters parked at one end—might
have been snapped.
Only a personal trip to the airport by
a well-regarded and persuasive U. S. mili
tary attaché preserved the film for pos
terity— and for President Sukarno.
Some E pisodes P leasant
But there were other highly pleasant
episodes: The small Egyptian schoolboy
standing in his classroom to read a "wel
come to Americans” which he himself
had composed in English; the helpfulness
of other newsmen all along the way; the
intelligence of an Intourist girl at Mos
cow in rescuing a piece of luggage that
went astray; the flight from Moscow to
Copenhagen on a new Soviet jet—the
TU 104, swept wings outside and midVictorian décor inside, seat-belt signs in
Russian and English, and lunch served
of caviar, boiled chicken, rice and vodka
for those who wanted it.
I think everyone takes a deep breath
of freedom when he emerges from be
hind the Iron Curtain. It is not merely
the larger supplies of consumer goods
in the West (visible right at the Copen
hagen Airport). It is the feeling that
one has left a realm where the brooding,
all-powerful state can be almost mental
ly weighed and felt.
Of course the atmosphere in Moscow
and Warsaw is much lighter than in the
grim Stalin era, and there is no shadow
ing by the secret police. Still, one knows
that the state rules supreme, that the
whim of the individual is frowned upon,
that anybody’s mail can be opened. Mr.
Converse had greater freedom in photo
graphing at Moscow than in some Asian
nations: The only time a policeman blew
his whistle on him was when he snapped
the main gate of the Kremlin. Still, you
sense the drab atmosphere (especially in
winter) and realize how long it will take
for these people to win through to full
"freedom for the individual.”
Yet one of my great impressions was
how fast mankind—in the underdevel
oped nations— is awakening to demand
better living standards, more respect for
6
the individual, and a larger place in
the sun.
Pick up any newspaper in Asia, the
Middle East or Africa and you immedi
ately see these nations engaged in the
business of moving into the twentieth
century. Prime Ministers visit back and
forth and cement friendship pacts. Cul
tural delegations are en route somewhere.
Capital development programs are an
nounced—a new harbor here, a hydro
electric dam there. Economic missions—
from Japan and the West—visit the new
countries to plan joint programs.
Another basic observation concerns
what we might call the "population
bomb.” Even a little foreign aid lowers
the mortality rate in any country; usually
the birth rate keeps right on. The re
sult: Bulging populations in Java, Egypt,
India et al—and what’s to be done about
them? Japan has begun population limi
tation, and is keeping its boat on even
keel in rough economic waters. But in
some other countries, all the foreign aid
and industrialization and dam-building is
barely enabling grain-growing and indus
try and development to keep pace with
the burgeoning population. How is this
one to be solved?
U. S. P olicies M uch I mproved
A more hopeful observation: Obviously
the United States and its policies are
much better regarded among the new
nations today than was the case a few
years ago. Washington no longer equates
neutrality with immorality. W e are send
ing out better foreign service personnel
and ambassadors, generally speaking—
and none of the caricatures penned in
"The Ugly American.” Our diplomats
are performing well these days in India,
Burma, Japan, Indonesia and many other
lands. Our foreign aid programs are
doing pretty well.
Simultaneously the Communists have
lost ground heavily, thanks to Red
China’s behavior in Tibet, its launching
of the hideous communes system, and its
incursions against India’s northern fron
tier. In the Middle East, Marshal Tito
has given Egypt’s President Nasser some
potent advice about how to deal with the I
Kremlin; after all, Tito has had experi- j
ence! In Indonesia, high officials will
quietly admit now that the U. S. Seventh
Fleet protects their "freedom to be neu- !
tral.”
re
w.
ce
in
co
ar
ex
N ew N ations Idea-H ungry
I found it a considerable privilege to ;
meet and talk with Prime Minister Mac- j
millan, Chancellor Adenauer and Messrs.
Kishi, Chiang Kai-Shek, Sukarno, Nehru,
Nasser, Ben Gurion, Nkrumah and the
rest. Not one of them emerged as less i
than a patriot, working long hours for
what he considered his country’s best in- i
terests.
Admittedly a few of the leaders I in- !
terviewed are classified as villains or nearvillains in the American press. But when
you see them close up, converse with them, I
hear their hopes and aspirations, you ac- f
quire a more sympathetic impression. And
each one, you discover, has a special "rap- !
port” with his people—a reason why he’s *
where he is.
Nehru wears worthily the mantle of |
Gandhi. Sukarno speaks to the Indone- i
sians of distant dreams for their island ;
archipelago. U N u is regarded as nearly
a Buddhist saint. Nkrumah has put
Ghana in the forefront of the African I
independence movement.
In the newly-emerging 70-80 per cent '
of mankind, things are going to be hap- f
pening rather fast, from here on. The
United States can play—is beginning to
play—a most significant and helpful j
role. One thing we can recognize is that
these new countries are hungry for ideas, \
philosophies, programs, which will meet j
their special needs. University shelves :
in Indonesia are often almost bare of text- f
books. Burma is seeking a governmental
solution which will be constitutional yet
avoid the political corruption and stale- '
mate which recently forced the military
to intervene.
Sometimes American newspapers have !
reported only the intrigues, the foreign
adventuring, the mistakes of these new
(Continued on next page)
't
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
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regimes. We should be concerned also
with the wide grist of favorable news con
cerning development programs, village
improvement schemes, building of new
colleges and schools, agricultural reform
and the like.
And we can help these countries with
exchange student programs, with the dis
patch of newspapers, magazines and text
books for the bare shelves, and with
competent foreign aid programs.
,
Careers Anyone?
ixty-nine
men, the great majority
alumni, representing 23 different
vocational fields, will visit the campus on
November 20-21 to participate in the
1959 Careers Conference. Selected from
the professions, the arts and business,
the men will serve as consultants in a
program designed to give career guidance
and orientation to Colgate undergradu
ates.
The conference will be patterned after
the one held in March, 1958, which met
with great enthusiasm by consultants
and undergraduates alike. According to
present plans, it will open with a keynote
address in the Chapel on Friday morning,
November 20. Panel sessions featuring
three experts and a student chairman in
each area will follow a planning lunch
eon. Consultants will dine in the
evening at the various student living units
in order to afford undergraduates oppor
tunity to discuss careers informally.
On Saturday morning panel discussions
will continue, each covering a different
vocational area. Whereas last year the
Saturday luncheon concluded the Confer
ence, this year the program may be car
ried on into the afternoon.
Under the supervision of the Offices
of Public Information and Placement,
Bruce Barth ’60 of Omaha, Neb., will
serve as Student Director of the Confer
ence. In addition to alumni, Trustees
and friends of the University and par
ents of undergraduates will be invited to
serve as consultants.
S
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
Thomas M. Iiams,
Librarian, Dies at 61
Came to Colgate in
1931 from Huntington
Library in California
was shock
ed and saddened by word of the
sudden death, on August 22, of Thomas
M. Iiams, University Librarian since 1939Recuperating in a Cooperstown hospital
from what was generally believed to be
a mild heart attack, he had returned home
only a week before he was fatally stricken.
He was sixty-one years old.
A native of Pasadena, California, Mr.
Iiams held degrees from U.C.L.A. and
the University of Chicago. He came to
Colgate from the Huntington Library at
San Marino, where he had been serving
under Dr. Leslie E. Bliss ’l l , to succeed
Dr. Charles W. Spencer during President
Cutten’s administration.
He was an
acknowledged authority on methods of
preserving rare books and manuscripts
and had written two books on the sub
ject. Taking up where Dr. Spencer had
left off in his efforts to indoctrinate the
imperative need for new facilities, Mr.
Iiams was largely responsible for the plans
and specifications of the new library
building. On the occasion of the dedica
tion ceremonies last April he thanked
everyone who had shared in his "dream
come true” and called it "the happiest
day of my life.” Mr. Iiams had also been
highly successful in encouraging gifts of
rare books and manuscripts toward the
University collection.
In an excellent article he wrote for the
dedication booklet, entitled "A Building
with a Philosophy,’’ Mr. Iiams was expres
sing his own philosophy of the signifi
cance of a library to a college: "The de
sign*. furnishings, service and special
facilities of the new library emphasize its
role as the cultural center of the Universi
ty. Colgate is constantly reviewing the
effectiveness of its teaching and attempt
T
he college community
Thomas M. Iiams
ing to excite the intellectual curiosity of
its students. Moreover, the new library
hopefully makes the habit of reading so
attractive that more and more of our stu
dents will find in the collection and use
of books a lifelong satisfaction.”
In addition to a number of professional
affiliations, including service as a con
sultant to the National Archives, Mr.
Iiams belonged to Sigma Zeta (now Zeta
Psi) at U.C.L.A., Rounce and Coffin of
Los Angeles and was an honorary mem
ber of Phi Kappa Tau. He had been a
member of the Hamilton Club for many
years and had served as its president.
Many friends of Mr. Iiams, learning of
his passing too late to send a floral trib
ute, have sent contributions to the Library
Fund in his memory.
He is survived by his wife, Dorothy
Wents Iiams of Hamilton, and a son,
Thomas M. Iiams, Jr. ’50, an instructor
at Queens College, New York City. Fol
lowing services conducted by the Rev. Dr.
Paul F. Swarthout ’21 in the Memorial
Chapel, interment was in the College
cemetery.
7
Young Man With a Mission
When he was in the sixth grade Mike Corwin 959
knew exactly what he wanted to be
a little boy in the
sixth grade at Brooklyn Friends
School answered the inevitable assign
ment "W hat do you want to be when
you grow up?” by writing a paper en
titled: "I want to be a harness horse
driver.”
Two years ago, a sophomore at Colgate
wrote a twenty-three-page paper for Core
22 entitled "W hat is wrong with Com
missioner Monaghan?”
On June 8 the little boy from Mattituck became an alumnus of Colgate and
the very next day drove Dinsmore Han
over in a race at Vernon Downs.* He is
not only one of a tiny fraction of drivers
in the Country who holds a college de
gree, but he is certainly attached to one
of the most implausibly aristocratic
"handles” in his profession: Richard
Skidmore Corwin, Jr., Choate ’55, Col
gate ’59.
As if such a remarkable record of per
sistence to an ideal did not prove it,
"Mike” Corwin is a young man with a
mission. From the day in 1949 that his
grandfather, who had been injured
training jumpers, bought his first trot
ter on advice of his doctor to develop a
new hobby, Mike Corwin has been dedi
cated to the proposition that the life of a
trainer-driver was to be desired yea, even
above fine jewels. Every Christmas and
spring recess from high school and later
from Choate, he trotted off in a cloud
of dust for Pinehurst to work with his
grandfather’s horses; every summer he
followed the circuit. In 1951, age four
teen, he was allowed to handle his first
horse. They call it "walking hots,” grad
ually cooling out a horse after the
T
en years ago
race (an occupation recommended strict
ly for those who love horses almost as
much as wom en).
At nineteen, Mike got his license. Now
you don’t accomplish this distinction sim
ply by applying to the U. S. Trotting As
sociation, or by paying over a fee to the
Racing Commission. You achieve it only
when six veteran licensed drivers vouch
for your competence by expressing their
willingness to have you drive against
them in a race.
“T his is the D ay ”
For most aspiring young novices this
is "the day.” Now all you need is a
break from the trainer (willing to “give”
you a horse), a good dose of self-confi
dence and a pat on the head from Lady
Luck and "you’re off.” Not so for Mike
Corwin.
His trainer, Mr. A1 Jones, happened
to be a man with a mission too. He made
up his mind early that license or not,
young Mike wouldn’t drive a single horse
in a single race until he successfully sur
mounted obstacle No. 2: Graduation from
College. "The day I see your Colgate
diploma,” he is understood to have said,
"you get to drive your first race.” Mike
received his diploma, with a concentration
in Economics, on Monday, June 8, and
Mr. Jones kept his word by letting him
drive Dinsmore Hanover under the lights
at Vernon Downs the following evening.
He has driven nine times since then,
finishing second once and third once.
Harness horse racing is one of the
few professions left in which there is
no known short-cut to the top; it in
volves a long, patient, dedicated appren
ticeship to develop the skill, knowledge
and experience necessary to success. And
even that doesn’t take account of the
element of luck. Mark Twain said that it
was a difference of opinion that made
horse races. The "breaks”— literally and
figuratively—win them. Mike, who is
technically known as Second Trainer,
knows this very well. He has been
thrown, bitten, kicked, stomped on and
run away with. But he intends to stick
with it until he has demonstrated con
clusively whether he can or cannot make
a respectable living at his beloved sport.
Happily, he has a wife—the former
Eleanor Warn back of Mattituck (and a
three-months old daughter, Debbie)—
who share his enthusiasm; a father (R. S.
(Continued on page 29)
At nearby Vernon Downs "Mike" drove his first race the day after his graduation
* O. Henry would have had him win
this race. He didn’t. He came in sixth.
[Ed. note].
8
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
COULD
YOU GET
YOUR
COLLEGE
DEGREE
TODAY?
It A ll Depends on You
A forthcoming issue of the News — how "forthcoming” to
depend upon the response from our readers — we plan to institute
a new department: Letters to the Editor. Many Alumni magazines have
carried such a regular feature for years. Some do not. We are fully
aware of certain sensitive problems which such a department raises. But,
properly handled, we believe that such a feature can become a useful
forum for the expression of Alumni opinion and a highly entertaining
department of the magazine.
We will accept no contributions which are not signed with the
author’s name, address and class designation. We reserve the right to
use our own judgment in editing lengthy communications to conserve
space, clearly indicating when this is done. Moreover, this is frankly
experimental. After a reasonable period, if circumstances do not seem
to justify the continuance of the feature, it will be dropped. How
successful — that is, how useful and how interesting it may become —
depends, quite obviously, upon you.
I
n
Clsiss of ’63
Lower Hudson Valley
Oct. 27
R. Howard
Long Island
Oct. 25-31
R. Shirley
Pittsburgh, Cleveland,
Toledo, Detroit
Nov. 8-14
R. Shirley
(Continued from page 4)
together with rising costs of travel, it is
apparent that the system of annual school
visits previously followed by the Admis
sions Staff will have to be modified.
With this in mind, it is planned that the
Director of Admissions will travel exten
sively this fall with the primary goal of
meeting with teams of Student Selection
workers, as well as visiting secondary
schools.
Insofar as budgetary restrictions will
permit, and barring unforeseen circum
stances, the tentative schedule of area
visits by admissions officials of the Col
lege is as follows:
Grand Rapids, Chicago,
Milwaukee, St. Paul
New Jersey
Philadelphia and
Chester, Pa., area
Southern New England
Oct. 4-10
R. Shirley
Oct. 11-17
R. P. Jaycox
Oct. 14, 15, 16
R. Howard
Oct. 18-24
R. Shirley
Time was when the facts you knew
and the ideas you could express were
tested form ally —when the ominous
little blue book demanded a full
accounting and presented you with a
score.
It’s not that cut-and-dried any more.
No grades, no reports, no required
reading.
Yet the life you lead today probably
makes you marshal your facts and
defend your opinions on dozens of
different subjects a dozen times a
week.
Northern New England
Nov. 1-7
R. P. Jaycox
Rochester, Buffalo,
Erie, Pa.
Nov. 15-21
R. P. Jaycox
Why not let TIME help?
It’s warmly recommended reading
for millions of people like yourself.
People who m ust be ready to talk well
on anything from books to business to
rockets to radiation . . . whose friends
represent a multitude of professions
...w h o s e busy lives demand fast,
accurate information that’s cleanly,
clearly, skillfully presented.
Try t i m e for a while. See if it
doesn’t tell you more—more percep
tively, more usefully.
The coupon below invites you to sub
scribe at a special introductory rate.
St. Louis, Omaha, Denver,
Nov. 29-Dec. 12
Kansas City, Cincinnati
R. Shirley
Wilmington, Baltimore,
Washington, D. C.
Jan. 11-16
R. Shirley
As the competition for admission to
college increases on a national scale, the
role of alumni in Student Selection work
becomes ever more important. The O f
fice of Admissions seeks the cooperation
and understanding support of all alumni
in this important work and, in turn,
pledges its own full cooperation with the
Alumni Corporation.
3 407
TIME
540 N. Michigan Ave.
Chicago 11, Illinois
□ P lease send me TIME for
27 weeks and bill me for $1.97.
□ I prefer 5 years for $20.
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
9
These rates good only in U. S. and Canada.
In all other countries, 23 tveeks for $2.97.
THE IDEA OF FREEDOM:
1959
Freedom— that sprawling, restlessly alive force in man— can undergo many chang
es from its revolutionary and violent conception. In the following article, Everett
Case, President of Colgate University, examines modern freedom and some of its
alterations. Dr. Case, a former consultant to the State Department, adapted the ar
ticle from a speech he made before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Colgate.
Reprinted from Saturday Review, July 4, 1959.
N ffEREWHON,” that celebrated sat
ire, Samuel Butler neatly ridicules
the notion that the people put a high
er value upon their intellectual and spirit
ual currency than on pounds, shillings,
and pence. I contend nevertheless that
debasement of the dollar is not the most
disturbing aspect of our postwar world.
Even more serious is the current disposi
tion, at home and abroad, to question the
intrinsic value of the ideas and proposi
tions that have nourished the American
spirit from the beginning.
Take the idea of freedom. If one were
to undertake a book on these United
States as a case study of the free society,
his point of departure would obviously
be this concept. Is this another victim of
inflation ?
The question is worth pursuing. For
one thing, the concept of freedom has
become as familiar to us as an old hat or
a new Ford. How can anything we take
so much for granted, as part of the nat
ural order of things, be at the same time
the explosive and revolutionary force that
we are told this is ?
Reading the history of the Renaissance,
we can, of course, perceive the subversive
impact on church and state of doctrines
like the liberty of conscience or the nat
I
10
ural rights of man. Again we know that the extraordinary release of individual en
documents like our Declaration of Inde ergies, which constituted the common de
pendence had their impact in time as well nominator of all these revolutions.
as space. But perhaps we can best grasp
the nature of the concept of freedom if
we view it as a kind of nuclear explosion
NDISCIPLINED freedom, how
in the mind and spirit, touching off a
ever, quickly becomes anarchy and
revolutionary chain reaction that is by so, as a people, we found it necessary to
no means spent.
impose certain curbs upon our political
Once let the doctrine of the divine and industrial revolutions, which are epit
right of kings be challenged by the indi omized in the concept of liberty under
vidual’s claim to freedom and autonomy, law. Much of our history, and hence a
and nowhere is the established order safe. great part of the case study I suggested,
The fires of revolt threaten the ecclesias can be written in terms of our successive
tical domain; the political revolution be —and not always successful—attempts to
comes economic and social; art and litera reconcile a buoyant spirit of liberty and
ture are transformed and Galileo and free enterprise with the effective rule of
Copernicus become the martyrs of the law and the legitimate claims of society.
new republic of science, which in due
Never easy, the task this poses is clear
course is destined to split the atom.
ly unfinished and indeed unending. By
But if the discovery and colonization and large, however, we have demonstrat
of America were in a sense by-products ed our ability to come to terms with these
of these revolutionary forces, the new typically American revolutions. Nor is it
world offered the latter not only a refuge wholly without significance, perhaps, that
but a continental opportunity, virtually de despite the rascality, injustice, and mis
void of interests vested in the status quo. ery that have punctuated, from time to
Thus the capital and labor as well as the time, our headlong industrial expansion,
technical, legal and managerial ingenuity, it was to the mills of Lancashire rather
required for the exploitation and devel than New England that Karl Marx turned
opment of America’s vast resources were for his famous case study in the evils of
supplied and constantly replenished by capitalism.
U
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
But with one revolution, which is still
gaining momentum on a kind of geomet
rical scale, we have not yet come to terms.
I refer to the continuing revolution in sci
ence and technology, whose dynamic
scope and import alternately excite and
appall our finite imaginations. In itself
it is only the latest manifestation of the
chain reaction I mentioned, which traces
back to this original and explosive idea
of human freedom. And because the
forces lately released by this continuing
revolution now pose a threat of annihila
tion quite as comprehensive as Noah’s
flood, we are apt to find the concept that
could bring us to this pass no longer the
intoxicating draught that it was to our
fathers, but very sobering indeed.
In the meantime, we have witnessed a
kind of flight from freedom that has
given a new lease on life to an older,
and as we had thought, discredited con
cept of society. For Americans, no phe
nomenon could have been more baffling
than the resurgence in our time of the
authoritarian state, with its one-party sys
tem supporting a fiihrer or dictator to
whose words and acts all individuals
must subscribe on pain of "excommunica
tion.” More baffling still is the realiza
tion that the prodigious and painful ef
Galileo — became mar
tyr of the new re
public of science.
fort required to strike down the Fascist
version of the authoritarian state resulted
in a notable accretion of strength to the
Communist or Soviet version. On the one
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
the devil in our world and as the
hand, it was Soviet Russia—no less spent
standard by which we measure our
and ravaged by the struggle than the
progress. If we weren’t getting ahead
Western European democracies — which
of Russia, or falling behind her,
colonized, "converted,” and virtually an
how could we tell where we were?
nexed the "liberated” states of Eastern
Europe; on the other hand, a Communist
Mr. Hutchins then wryly observes that
revolution took over the government of
Our real problems are also concealed
China, and threatened China’s neighbors.
from us by our current remarkable
Finally, to complete our bewilderment,
prosperity, which results in part
both Moscow and Peiping have somehow
from the production of arms that we
contrived to organize their sprawling pop
do not expect to use and in part
ulations into increasingly effective eco
from our new way of getting rich,
nomic, as well as military, forces. Thus
which is to buy things from one an
the Communist brand of the authoritarian
other that we do not want at prices
state challenges today not only the mili
we
cannot pay on terms we cannot
tary and economic primacy of our
meet because of advertising we do
free society, but also the sacred proposi
not believe.
tion that a dynamic economy and higher
living standards must be built on the
premise of freedom.
There are, of course, other factors that
contribute to our growing sense of dis
may and apprehension. Whatever the
sense of guilt we may derive from the
fact that, so far, we are the only nation
that has actually used an atomic bomb
against another, it is doubtless overshad
owed by the shocking realization that,
within a decade, the American monopoly
of atomic weapons has been transformed
into an apparent Soviet primacy, so far as
Milton—tried to recon
missiles are concerned.
cile existence of evil
If this apparent lead be real, its impli
with goodness of God.
cations for American and Western diplo
macy are, to put it mildly, sufficient cause
for concern. And this is compounded by
the uneasy sense that circumstance—to
This observation I have ventured to
wit, the continuing revolution in science
and technology—has made a mockery of quote not because it pretends to do full
our efforts to achieve democratic control justice to an economy which, more nearly
over the issue of war and peace. Small than any other in human experience, has
wonder, then, that we have still not come satisfied the basic human needs of the
to terms with this international revolu people that support it, but because it
tion. Small wonder, too, that our atti puts its fingers on an aspect of our eco
tudes toward Russia betray the confusion nomic and social life with which, to say
to which Mr. Robert Hutchins calls atten the least, we have become increasingly
tion in a recent issue of the Saturday Re disenchanted. Thus, we rightly ask our
selves whether our free society is doing
view.
all it can to meet the authoritarian chal
lenge, if so large a proportion of our
The stresses and strains in our soci
men and machines, of our skill and in
ety [writes Mr. Hutchins] are ob
genuity is devoted to the manufacture and
scured for us partly by our preoc
distribution of luxury items we do not
cupation with Russia, which plays a
need and gadgetries we do not want.
curious double role in our lives as
11
In the same context, one is bound to
mention the toll levied against our econ
omy by cynics who exploit the printed
word for corrupt purposes, by organized
gangsters and purveyors of race hatred,
and by our juvenile delinquents from
eight to eighty. Why have delinquency
and disorder infected the public schools,
and the system of universal education
that has long been our proudest boast?
Why does our free society so often seem
all but impotent to deal with such mani
festations of economic and human waste?
How long will it take a people "dedicated
[in Lincoln’s words] to the proposition
that all men are created equal” to make
that proposition even legally effective for
our colored population, North as well as
South ?
And, since all of these sins of omis
sion and commission constitute an im
portant part of the world’s image of
America, why in all conscience should we
expect the so-called backward nations to
take our free society as their proper
model ?
In one sense this effort to assay the
present value of our intellectual cur
rency has not taken us very far. It has, in
fact, not taken us beyond the initial ex
amination of a single concept. For this I
offer no apology; I have deliberately se
lected this concept of freedom for scruti
ny because on its validity rests that of our
intellectual currency as a whole.
How, then, do you assay its value?
Shall we denounce it as hopelessly de
based and ready for the discard because
it has proven itself to be no panacea at
the very moment that we hunger most
for panaceas ? Or have we, perhaps, been
guilty of ascribing to this concept cer
tain magic properties while undervaluing
those intrinsic to it?
At this point it is my intention to state
a number of propositions that you are at
liberty to accept, reject or restate, as your
own judgment dictates. I have just stated
the first: you are at liberty, I said, to ac
cept, reject or restate, as your judgment
dictates. Are you indeed? The determinists will tell you that your response—
or lack of it—has already been dictated
by a complex of circumstances which you
12
have always been, and are, powerless to
control. The authoritarians will assert
that you have no right to exercise such
liberty, that your judgment is probably
callow and ill-informed, and that in any
event papa—meaning the State, meaning
the Party, meaning the Dictator—knows
best, by definition. And 1 will remind
you that this liberty is inseparable from
responsibility, because its exercise entails
consequences for you and for society. Let
—A rt from Bellmann Archive
Oliver Wendell Holmes
—reminds us that the
inevitable comes to
pass by effort.
no one delude you into believing that the
free society is not vitally concerned about
the welfare of the whole; it simply be
lieves that this end requires, among other
things, the exercise of free and respon
sible judgment by the individuals who
comprise it.
My second proposition is that, however
oppressive the responsibilities of freedom
may at times become, life for the mature
and healthy person who has ever experi
enced freedom would be intolerable with
out it. Ask the Poles. Ask the Czechs,
Ask the Hungarians. Few of the Rus
sians, to be sure, have ever known free
dom as we understand it, but if you are
discontented with your lot, consider "Doc
tor Zhivago.” Here you will encounter
the torments of a soul, which first em
braced the generous promises of the Com
munist revolution only to discover that,
like Macbeth’s weird sisters, the masters
of the Kremlin knew only too well how to
. . . keep the word of promise to our
ear.
And break it to our hope.
My third proposition is that, in the
long run, freedom is prerequisite to hu
man dignity, creative achievement, and
the pursuit of the good life. Without it,
Kant’s categorical imperative is meaning
less, and so in great measure is Christ’s
second commandment. As for the first
commandment, C. S. Lewis has recently
reminded us of the Miltonic effort to
reconcile the existence of evil with the
goodness of God. In substance, Milton—
and Lewis—ask quite simply how the
Creator could find any satisfaction in his
creatures’ pursuit of the good unless they
were also free to choose evil. If Milton’s
answer poses new questions for the phi
losopher and the critic, his point is at
least germane to my subject.
My recent visit to Angkor should
serve, of course, to remind me that in
certain of the arts—and notably in archi
tecture and sculpture—great things have
been achieved under authoritarian direc
tion and control. Nor am I unaware of
the frustrations and difficulties of which
our own creative artists and writers com
plain. Conceding all this, I would nev
ertheless contend that man’s creative spirit
is not to be cabined and confined, and
that it must sooner or later reassert its
characteristic demand for liberty or death.
My fourth propositition is that, where
as abuses creep into every kind of hu
man society, only the free society gives its
citizens the opportunity to get rid of them
through personal initiative or voluntary
cooperation or both. The real reason, in
deed, that freedom cannot be regarded
as a panacea is precisely that it spells
opportunity, neither more nor less. Its
successes and failures, therefore, are not
intrinsic but are wholly dependent upon
the use we make of the options and the
openings it affords us.
Here in a nutshell one discovers both
its limitations and its genius: what free
dom is not and what it is. We do neither
ourselves nor the cause of freedom any
service by suggesting that an individual or
a people has only to embrace it in order
to find an automatic solvent for all ills.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
For it may even be true of individuals, as
it is certainly true of nations, that their
experience has not yet equipped them
to understand, much less to shoulder, the
responsibilities which freedom entails.
In our repeated failures to make full
and generous use of our opportunities—
to clear away the slums, to strengthen
our schools and colleges, to apply con
structive solutions to our transportation
and communications muddle, to create a
new world order, to substitute discrimi
nating for discriminatory judgments of our
fellow men—there is, to be sure, abun
dant room for frustration and dismay. But
before blaming these failures not upon
ourselves but upon the concept which
provides the opportunities, we would do
well to look a little further.
Isn’t it true that on most of these fronts
we have been making progress and are
discouraged only by the sluggish pace at
which we move? Isn’t this true of racial
segregation? Isn’t it true that the forces
that only a decade ago seemed insur
mountable barriers to the dream of Eu
ropean union have been yielding to the
creative forces which, beginning with the
Coal and Steel community and culminat
ing in today’s Common Market, are actu
ally forging the unity of Europe, step by
inexorable step? What except the buoy
ancy and determination born of freedom
could have survived such initial failures
as the repudiation of the European De
fense Community and found other means
of achieving its end, always by consent
and never by coercion? Shall free men
now permit the Soviets to sabotage this
development by force or threats of force?
And if, to come back to our original con
cern, the concept of freedom under law
is not to be trusted in our efforts to put
nuclear fission to its unimaginably con
structive, rather than its fatally destruc
tive, uses, in what alternative concept,
may I ask, would you put your trust ?
I have been attempting to demonstrate
to my own satisfaction that the true con
cept of freedom, divested of the extrava
gant pretensions with which we mistaken
ly invest it, is not in fact debased; and
that, in the long run at least, it is indis
pensable to the good life. To say this is in
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
W. P. R ogers ’34 E lected T rustee
P. Rogers ’34, Attorney
General of the United States, was
unanimously elected a Trustee of the Uni
versity at the fall meeting of the Board
held on Homecoming Weekend.
A native of Norfolk, New York, Bill
was graduated from Cornell Law School
in 1937. Employed for a brief period by
a Wall Street firm, on his own initiative
he secured an appointment as an Assistant
District Attorney under former Governor
Thomas E. Dewey. Following a fouryear hitch in the Navy, ending his ser
vice as a Lieutenant Commander, he
served as counsel for two Senate Com
mittees before being appointed Deputy
Attorney General in 1953. Four years
later, President Eisenhower appointed
him Attorney General of the United
States to succeed Herbert Brownell.
When he presented Bill for an honor
ary degree at Commencement in 1958,
"Kail” noted that in his first year as Dean
of Students (1934) he had presented him
for his Bachelor’s degree. "It is there
fore a particular pleasure that in my last
year in this office I have the high honor
once again to present him, this time for
an honorary degree of Doctor of Civil
Law.” Bill gave the Commencement ad
dress that year.
This June he also served as Master of
Ceremonies for the Alumni Luncheon
when he returned for his twenty-fifth re
union. He is a member of Sigma Chi
fraternity.
Bill is married to the former Adele
Langston and they have one daughter,
Dale, and three sons, Anthony, Jeffrey
and Douglas. They live in Bethesda,
Maryland.
no sense to disparage the prodigious
achievements, many of them constructive
as some are certainly disturbing, which
our brothers in Russia and even in China
have effected under a very different aegis.
Insofar as a people is not prepared—as
many of our own are not—to make wise
and responsible use of freedom’s precious
opportunities, centralized authority may
well be invoked as a necessary, albeit a
temporary, expedient for directing their
capacities into socially productive chan
nels. That this authoritarian system car
ries with it the grave danger that these
capacities may be directed into destructive
channels is, of course, a fact which for
the moment we are forced to live with.
History suggests, moreover, that only the
most enlightened despot is prepared to
relinquish or even share his power, ex
cept as the demand of the people becomes
irresistible. But if this is unlikely to oc
cur in Russia during my lifetime, I sub
mit that it might well happen in yours—
provided only you take to heart Mr.
Justice Holmes’s reminder that "the mode
by which the inevitable comes to pass is
effort.”
In the meantime, as we value our free
dom, let us be wary of cheap assertions
that history, or a so-called wave of the
future, is destined to overwhelm it. Let
us remember that the genius of freedom
lies precisely in its ability to renew the
creative forces that are always and every
where in mortal combat with the forces
of sterility and decay. Let us cherish
freedom, then, precisely for the oppor
tunities it affords of demonstrating its
virtues afresh to a world that sorely needs
its gospel of hope.
After all, we are its chief custodians
in time as well as space, and in assessing
its true value for ourselves, we may be
saving it for others. But we shall save
our freedom—and ourselves—only as we
learn to use it in our time with restraint
and sensitivity, to be sure, but also with
the boldness and the imagination de
manded by the perils of our situation.
W
illiam
He will succeed to the vacancy created
by the resignation of Raymond E. Brooks
’09, who had served on the Board for
sixteen years.
13
For m en
you n g en ou gh
to be
The opportunities for a highly success
ful career in life insurance selling have
never been better . . . and nowhere
are those opportunities greater than with
Massachusetts Mutual.
v
t
/
Consider these signposts o f success:
More than a billion dollars of Massachusetts Mutual life insurance
was sold in 1958, our seventh consecutive all-time high year.
Men in their first and second years with us accounted for 26%
of our 1958 sales volume.
Each of 166 representatives placed over $1,000,000 of Ordinary
life insurance in Massachusetts Mutual for a total of $234,833,000.
The 662 men with our company five years or longer earned $13,088
per man, with one in six earning over $20,000.
Our 100 leading salesmen earned an average of $30,357 last year.
Massachusetts Mutual trains men for successful selling . . . pays
them while they learn.
If you are looking for a new future with unlimited opportunities,
write for a free copy of "A Selling Career”. Or if you are already
established please call this advertisement to the attention of
someone not yet in the proper business niche.
M assach u setts M utual
M j3ty
nr^
H.J Mi
ORGANIZED
1851
S P R IN G FIE LD ,
m"
MASSACHUSETTS
FC
Maroon MEMOS
Colgate is one of the colleges chosen to participate in the
National Defense Student Loan Program, and has received a
Federal allocation of $38,124. The U. S. Office of Education
allots funds to each State and the State Department of Educa
tion recommends the allocation to the specific institution. The
University is required to add one-ninth to the Federal contri
bution. Hence Colgate has available this year a fund of $42,460
to help needy and promising students. The loans are non
interest bearing during a student’s undergraduate career and
must be paid back within ten years after he leaves college, dur
ing which time a low interest rate is charged.
*
*
*
Rockland County’s brand new Community College at
Suffern, which was scheduled to open September 28, can thank
Charles G. Hetherington T6 for just about everything. Com
mencing in mid-August as consultant, in six weeks he helped
buy a thirty acre campus, hired a twelve-man faculty, designed
a budget, set up an accounting system, purchased supplies and
helped select a president. He proposes to write a book on
"How to Establish a College in Four Easy Lessons.”
*
*
*
Eleven paintings given to Colgate during the past two
years by distinguished art collectors are being shown for the
first time this month in Lawrence Hall. Ranging from a
British mid-nineteenth century work to canvases by contem
porary artists of North and South America and Western
Europe, the collection includes gifts from Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Silverman of Philadelphia, Luis de Hoyos ’43 of Monticello,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Neuberger, Mr. and Mrs. Mac M. Welson, Herbert Mayer ’29, and Mrs. Samuel Kappel, all of New
York.
•I*
Colgate promotion pieces won an outright first and tied
with Brown for another top award in the American Alumni
Council competition for 1959, results of which were announced
in fune at the annual national conference at Mackinac Island.
The awards were given for the Class of 1934T eight-piece
direct mail campaign to promote its 25th reunion; and for an
illustrated manual for fund workers entitled "A Dollar a
Year, Let’s Start from Here.” Credit for both goes to Ed Rice
’34, who was the creative genius. (Incidentally, he is a vicepresident of the J. Walter Thompson Co.)
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
Keep it coming! Here is the box score for the 1959
Alumni Fund. Subscribers, 2143; subscribed, $84,628. Since
$7,644 of this amount is restricted for uses other than the
purposes of the Fund, $48,016 is still needed to reach our
goal. Of this amount, $35,893 will be allocated to the
Alumni War Memorial Scholarships; $12,123 toward the
William A. Reid Athletic Center.
*
*
*
Colgate’s participation in the Civil War is recalled in a
recent accession of the University Archives', an autograph album
containing signatures and photographs of many students for
the years 1861-66 who joined the Union forces, several in
uniform. This volume turned up in Meza, Arizona, and is in
part a gift from George F. German, Jr. ’44 who lives in
Phoenix.
H*
H*
A dedication program has been planned for Sigma Chi
alumni, actives, their sweethearts and their families on Satur
day, October 31. A buffet luncheon will be served at the new
house at noon and a brief dedication ceremony will be held
on the front lawn at 5:30 p. m. The dedication banquet will
be held at the Student Union, with dancing later in the eve
ning. Colgate Inn has been reserved for Sigma Chis.
*
*
*
Through the good offices of Kenneth E. Tietgen ’32, the
University Archives has acquired as a gift from Mr. Earl Mor
gan of Rochester a 13 by 16-inch pencil sketch entitled ’'View
of Hamilton, Executed by William Oliver Webster at the age
of eleven years, March, 1853.v This unusual item, which
resembles other contemporary views, clearly shows the campus
and Hill but has a series of buildings in the right foreground
which are not to be found in other pictures of the period. The
artist’s Hamilton connection and subsequent career are unkown.
*
*
*
Fatin Rustu Zorlu, the Turkish Foreign Minister, received
an honorary Doctor of Laws degree September 24 at the Uni
versity’s traditional Founder’s Day Convocation. President Case
addressed the students, faculty and friends of the University
at the ceremonies, which marked the 140th anniversary of the
founding of Colgate. Mr. Zorlu spoke last July to the eleventh
annual Colgate Conference on Foreign Policy.
15
W h a t D o e s B ig B u s in e s s
D o fo r L ittle B u s in e s s ?
It does a great deal.
The Bell System, for instance, buys from many
small businesses.
In 1958, its manufacturing and supply unit, the
Western Electric Company, did business with
more than 30,000 other firms throughout the
country. Nine out of ten of these suppliers
had fewer than 500 employees.
Purchases totaled more than $1,000,000,000.
In addition, Bell System employees spent a
large part of their $3,750,000,000 wages with
hundreds of thousands of other businesses.
The Bell System also helps many a small
business get started and grow by making its in
ventions and its product designs available to
others on reasonable terms.
BIG HELP FOR SMALL BUSINESS and a big help for us too.
Western Electric Company representative (left) discusses order with
one of its many small business suppliers. Item purchased here is
spring used in Bell telephone dials. Millions are bought every year.
Nearly eighty companies, for example, have
been licensed to make and sell transistors and
thus extend the usefulness of this amazing Bell
Telephone Laboratories invention.
There is no doubt that it has been one of the
biggest factors in the electronics boom.
BELL TELEPHONE
SYSTEM
CAMPUS AFFAIRS
Faculty Changes
New faculty appointments, promotions
and leaves of absence have been an
nounced by Eugene T. Adams, Dean of
the Faculty, as follows:
New appointments to the faculty are:
William P. Gerberding, instructor in po
litical science; Malcolm Pownall, instruc
tor in mathematics; Eric J. Ryan, instruc
tor in fine arts; Robert E. Goodwin, in
structor in zoology; Raymond Goloskie,
instructor in physics, and O. Stephen
Ireland, instructor in education.
Also, Michael Rywkin, instructor in
Russian; Paul K. Swanson, assistant cata
loguer in library; Capt. Paul L. Gray, air
science; Tech. Sgt. Richard J. Avery, air
science; Alva Kelley, assistant professor
in physical education and head football
coach; John Hooper, instructor in physi
cal education, and Joseph Restic, instruc
tor in physical education.
Professor Alfred Seeley Brown has
been named chairman of the chemistry
department, replacing Professor R. Ches
ter Roberts, who retired and was appoint
ed professor of chemistry, emeritus.
Professor Clement L. Henshaw has
been named Chairman of the Department
of Physics.
Associate professor Bruce M. Brown
has been named acting librarian to suc
ceed the late Thomas M. Iiams.
Sabbaticals
Granted sabbatical leaves for one se
mester are: Jorge M. Chavarri, associate
professor of the Romance Languages;
Charles A. Choquette, professor of the
Romance Languages; George H. Estabrooks, professor of psychology; Strang
Lawson and Russell F. Speirs, professors
of English, and Charles R. Wilson, pro
fessor of history.
Four others have been granted leaves
of absence for 1959-60. They are: John
E. Rexine, instructor in classical lan
guages who is doing advanced work at
Harvard; Marvin Wachman, professor of
history, to continue a second year as di
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
William Geyer '42, former All-East halfback in the early 1940's, who w as elected to the Board of
Trustees last June, speaks to the 380 members of the Class of 1963 at the traditional Alumni
Corporation picnic during Orientation Week. Due to inclement weather for the fourth consecutive
year, the picnic, scheduled for the Seven Oaks Golf Course picnic area, had to be moved to the
Student Union. Orientation Week, which has started on a Wednesday in recent years, began this
year on Sunday, September 13, and lasted for a full week. Not only did this new schedule permit
more parents to bring their sons to campus, but freshmen had more leisure time to meet friends
and relax in between exhaustive testing programs
P hoto by B roussard
rector of the Salzburg Seminars in Au
stria; Paul A. Jacobsen ’27, professor of
political science, to teach in Germany in
the University of Maryland Overseas Pro
gram, and Chi-Ming Hou, assistant pro
fessor of economics, to be a research fel
low in Chinese economic studies at Har
vard.
touring the United States during the first
semester. Alumni are invited to attend
one or more of these events which will
be included in the calendar in each issue
of the News. Robert G. Smith has been
appointed director of forensic activities.
Frank Farnsworth 939
James A. Storing, professor of politi
cal science, is president of the New York
State Conference of the American As
sociation of University Professors.
Frank A. Farnsworth ’39, professor of
economics, has been appointed to the
National Selection Committee for the Fulbright Foreign Studies Program. He will
join the committee reviewing applicants
for awards to Norway, Finland, Den
mark and Iceland.
Forensics
The Colgate chapter of Delta Sigma
Rho, national forensic honorary society,
will celebrate during the coming season
the Golden Anniversary of forensic ac
tivity on campus. Highlight of the fall
season is the varsity debate on October 11
with the Cambridge Debaters, who are
James A, Storing
Carl Miller 914
Carl Miller T4, Executive Secretary of
the Alumni Corporation, has been grant
ed a temporary leave of absence from his
duties to recover more fully from the
compound effects of a painful hip ailment
which immobilized him earlier in the
year, and the strain of overwork to which
he subjected himself in trying to catch up
afterwards. In the meantime, Bill Turn
er ’50, his assistant, is assuming his re
sponsibilities.
17
Colgate Away from Home:
19 Frosh Send-Off Parties
Mark Alumni Record
W ith the A dmissions O ffice limiting its
school visitations and placing considerably
more emphasis, instead, upon the cooperation
of Student Selection committees, one of the
most significant services rendered by these
Alumni groups is their Freshmen Send-off
parties. These functions provide the freshman
with his first real association with Colgate
DATE
8
Sept.
Aug. 31
Sept.
3
Aug. 31
Sept.
9
Sept.
8
Sept. 10
Aug. 30
Sept.
8
Sept.
9
Sept. 10
Sept. 10
6
Sept.
8
Sept.
Sept. 10
Sept. 12
Sept. 10
Aug. 26
Sept.
9
CLUB
Albany
Bergen County
Berkshire
Boston
Brooklyn
Chicago
Cleveland
Denver
Hartford
Jersey Shore
Long Island
N. New Jersey
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Rochester
Syracuse
Utica-Rome
W ashington
Westchester
men by giving him an opportunity to meet the
Alumni of his own area.
This year a record number of these affairs
had been reported by press time. Those who
missed the opportunity of attending one of the
following functions should be sure to make
every effort to be on hand for these parties
next fall.
LOCATION
Home Dr. Paul Clark ’37, Voorheesville
Home W illiam Fricke ’27, Ridgewood, N. J.
Yellow Aster Restaurant, Pittsfield, Mass.
Cambridge
Home Lewis Malin (father George Malin ’6l )
Home Angus Ray ’35, Barrington, 111.
Home W illiam Daley ’35, Hunting Valley, Ohio
Home Preston Smith ’46, Denver, Colo.
Simsbury, Conn.
Shrewsbury River Yacht Club, Fair Haven, N. J.
Garden City Casino, Garden City
Hotel Suburban, East Orange, N. J.
Home Frank McCown ’50, Berwyn, Pa.
Chamber of Commerce, Rochester
University Club, Syracuse
Club Monarch, Yorkville
St. Bartholomew’s Church, W hite Plains
N orthern N ew J ersey
NEW JERSEY SHORE CLUB
The Old Union House in Red Bank has
been the scene of many a long session
discussing the establishment of a muchneeded District Club for Central New
Jersey. Such stalwarts as Erv Wilkinson
'51, Ray Hinman '51, Felix Turtur '40,
Walt Rathbun '32, "Brud" Davis '51 and
others have burned a lot of midnight oil
and have come up with plans for what
they hope will be "an extremely active
organization". First activity on the agenda
w as a Tailgate party, providing an op
portunity for an informal get-together of
this new group in a Rutgers Stadium
parking lot on October 10. On behalf of
the already established clubs, the Alumni
Office wishes to extend congratulations
to the organizers of this new group for
a job well begun and to wish them every
success in the future.
18
A program for the coming season that
should appeal to Colgate men and their fami
lies has been outlined by the officers. First on
the list is the Princeton Game party on October
17 at Fire House No. 1. This will have taken
place by the time this issue reaches you.
Second event will be a Glee Club Concert,
tentatively set for mid-winter. In the spring a
Colgate Thirteen party is planned, the date
not yet set. The final get-together will be a
combination golf outing and annual meeting
with a speaker from the campus. If you are
located in the area, would like to receive
notices of these and other events, and your
name is not on the club’s mailing list, get in
touch with Edward J. Winslow ’56, Secretary,
88 Southgate Rd., Murray Hill, N. J.
P hiladelphia
The unrecognized golf professionals of the
Philadelphia District Club teed off for their
annual summer plowing on July 9 at the
Merion Golf Club in Ardmore. Two Mulligans
per hole were allowed so that a few of the
better duffers managed to come in with less
than 120. Alibiing got under way about 6:30
when the group sat down to dinner.
Long I sland
The club recently had a golf tournament at
Bethpage, during which many hearty souls
played the afternoon round despite the rain.
W inner of the tournament was W alter Pape
’50 of Garden City who shot an 80. Phil
Sanford ’49 of Massapequa secured an 84.
Syracuse
Keep November 12, Thursday, open for the
annual pre-Syracuse game smoker. Complete
details will be mailed to district alumni, but
mark the date on your calendar now. Also,
remember the regular Monday luncheon at
Baird’s Restaurant. Everyone is welcome and
urged to attend.
W estern N ew Y ork
Once again "Billy Acres” at Point Apino,
Ontario, Canada, was the scene of the an
nual summer outing. Swimming in the pool,
tennis and other outdoor sports, followed by
a cocktail hour and topped off with a big
steak or lobster dinner, inspired those present
to agree "You just can’t hardly find no parties
like that no more!”
Successful Summer
Total enrollment for Colgate’s summer
session was 314 students, of which seven
were undergraduates, two special and 303
graduate students. The session, largest
ever held on campus, included three
special programs in science and languages
which accounted for 157 students.
These special programs comprised the
National Science Foundation Institute for
Junior High School Teachers (5 9 ); the
N. Y. State Science Institute of Elemen
tary School Teachers in Math and Science
(24), and the National Foreign Language
Institute for Public Secondary School
Teachers in French, German and Spanish
(70). Colgate was chosen as one of
twelve institutions in the country to initi
ate this latter program.
In connection with the science and
foreign language programs, ten excep
tional high school students from this
area were selected to work with problems
considerably further advanced than those
in their normal high school curriculum.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
Resourceful” Added to Raider Lexicon
,
,
Kelley says “if you can’t outrun or bowl them over out-cute them99
by W alter D. Splain ’49, Director of Athletic Publicity
Coach Alva Kelley and Captain Joseph Wignot
Kerr Anniversary
•A special celebration marking the 30th anniversary of
Andy Kerr’s arrival at Colgate as head football coach will be
held at the time of the Bucknell game on November 7.
Players from the 1929 team will hold a reunion to salute
Andy at a get-together in the Colgate Inn following the game.
The reunion arrangements are being handled by Les Hart ’31.
Andy’s first Maroon team won eight of nine games, losing
only to Wisconsin, 13-6.
The official lineup for the Wisconsin game which was
played at the Camp Randall Stadium ran as follows:
LE Cy Sullivan ’31 or Mike Stramiello ’30; LT Art Hunt
ington ’30; LG Tom Doyle ’31; C John Cox ’30; RG Bob
Gillson ’30; RT Harry Haines ’30; RE Frank Abruzzino ’31
or John Orsi ’32; QB Jule Yablok ’30; LH Les Hart ’31 ; RH
Tom Dowler ’30; FB Len Macaluso ’31.
In addition to the Wisconsin game, scores for the year were:
Colgate 59, St. Lawrence 0; Colgate 31, Michigan State 0;
Colgate 21, Indiana 6; Colgate 52, Providence 0; Colgate 60,
Hampden-Sydney 0; Colgate 33, Columbia 0; Colgate 21,
Syracuse 0; Colgate 32, Brown 0.
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
•A dd a new adjective to the nickname "Red Raiders of the
Chenango Valley.”
Sometimes they’ve been rampaging,
rampant, raging, even rollicking. This year they’re resource
ful.
Well, A1 Kelley is, anyway, and he hopes his team will be
as the season unfolds. Kelley has taken the practical attitude
that this is as good a year as any to start making changes so
he’s scheming like a river boat gambler.
To begin with, the new coach of the Red Raiders inherited
a squad long on weight and short on speed. There was also a
noticeable lack of experience (only 11 lettermen back from
1958). Spirits were lagging. There was no apparent soften
ing among the opponents. In short, just about any change had
to be for the better.
When you’re not fast enough to run away from the other
fellow and not quite big enough to bowl him over, Kelley says
you have to out-cute him, keep him off balance, make him
guess wrong. Mix up the attack so he spreads his defenses
when you’re passing. That’s oversimplifying but it gives you
the general idea.
To do this, A1 has installed a completely new attack, a far
cry from the "three yards and a cloud of dust” thinking be
hind the split-T. After seven years of the split-T, the Red
Raiders are tossing aside their conservative game and are go
ing for broke.
Basically, the new offense is a combination of the straight T, the single wing and the double wing. This allows for flex
ibility in the ground game while maintaining plenty of chances
to pass. In fact, Kelley makes the pass his key weapon with
the running attack as a counter-balance. His Brown teams
averaged from 18 to 20 passes a game, and he sees no change
in that this year.
This naturally puts a great premium on quarterbacks. In
his original thinking, A1 was looking to Bob Paske ’61, the
only experienced signal caller, to shoulder most of the burden.
But no team can afford to rely solely on one quarterback so
the coach gambled and brought junior Ed Abel up from half
back to help out. This paid off early enough to allow
sophomore Pete Testa to pull a reverse switch, going from quar
terback to halfback. W alt Jones, an exceptional passer for a
sophomore, rounded out the throwing department.
The running department had trouble moving the ball last
year, but the backs learned a lot. They learned even more in
the first few weeks of practice as the coaches fed them plays
at every turn. To the amazement of some, the runners took
everything in stride and smoothed out their end of the attack
well in advance of expectations.
There was little doubt that Bernie Dailey ’60 could plow
his way through the line from fullback. W hat was needed was
some speed to the outside and enough mobility to add the
deception the new system called for. Veterans John Maloney
’61 and Herm Brauch ’61 would be counted on for maximum
effort; the sophomores had to develop to round out the plan.
(Continued on page 21)
19
A composite picture of success
This combination of photographs symbolizes the more
than 450 qualifying members of the Leaders Association,
New England Life’s organization of top salesmen. They
have diverse appearances and personalities, come from
different backgrounds, employ a variety of selling methods.
Yet all of these men have a common base on which their
success has been founded: belief in their product.
Our Average Leader* believes so strongly in what he
sells that his own life is insured for $96,950! And his
enthusiasm and ability led to an income of over $20,000
average ($15,000 m edian!) last year, through sales of more
than a million dollars of life insurance. The average size of
the 51 policies he sold was $22,523 — four times the
national average of the industry.
A college graduate, Mr. Average Leader entered the life
insurance business at the age of thirty-four. Now only forty
years old, he is a successful and hard-working business
man who enjoys unusual independence.
Perhaps a career of this sort appeals to you. There are
opportunities at New England Life for other ambitious
college men who meet our requirements. For more infor
mation, write to Vice President L. M. Huppeler, 501
Boylston Street, Boston 17, Massachusetts.
NEW ENGLAND
s—Æ/ïï7/l^ Ï ï JL
F F dMmw&fm/
( y
v / (M A M / Jiy
M J M
M J
bo sto n , m a ssa c h u setts
THE COMPANY THAT FOUNDED MUTUAL L IF E INSURANCE IN AM ERICA — 1835
*Based on the 275 returns received from a survey of the entire qualifying membership.
These Colgate University men are New England Life Representatives
Montague P. Ford '18, Boston
Carl L. Russell, Jr. '38, New York
Paul F. Ford CLU, '23, Philadelphia Evans F. Spear, Jr. '42, Boston
Asa F. Voak CLU, '35, Cleveland Jere D. Gilmore '42, New York
w,
Girard L. Clemons, Jr. '51, Panama City, Fla.
Robert B. Armstrong '44, General
Agent, Philadelphia
Martin J. Baltimore '47, Harrisburg
Robert M. Orth '48, Burlington, Vermont
Ask one of these competent men to tell you about the advantages of insuring in New England Life.
Football
(Continued from page 19)
OFF TO THE YALE BOWL
A chartered bus will leave the Plaza in Al
bany at 8:30 a. m. on October 24 for New
Haven, and will return to Albany by mid
night, Bill McHugh '56 announced.
The Westchester Club has reserved space in a
designated parking lot at the Yale Bowl on
October 24 for alumni "tailgate parties," ac
cording to Alan Egler '51.
Although reservation deadlines are past, you
still may not be too late if you get in touch
with Al Egler at Shrub Oak, Tel. Lakeland
8-6650, or Bill McHugh at 159 S. Lake Ave.,
Tel. Albany 8-5402.
Bowling Alleys Open
in Reid Athletic Center
•T he W illiam A. R eid Athletic Center opened its doors
for the first time in mid-September when the bowling lanes in
augurated the pin season. Eight lanes, complete with the
latest bowling features including automatic pinsetters, will be
in use the rest of the year for play in physical education classes,
intramural and community leagues and open play.
Special opening ceremonies are planned in connection with
the formal beginning of hockey in December. The Red Raider
skaters will make their home debut on December 11 with
Cornell. The artificial ice rink has been completed and is being
tested at present.
Earl F. Brown, former Penn State athlete and a prominent
Central New York bowler, is managing the bowling lanes.
Of these, by far the best was Jacque MacKinnon while Joe
Simunovich and Tom Scull could be counted on for help a
little later in the year. The big, fast MacKinnon was the near
est thing to a triple-threat back Colgate had seen in more years
than anyone cared to remember. He ran very well, punted
with the best and was adequate as a passer.
The line was put to work learning a new blocking setup
and it took to its work readily. Line coach Howie Hartman
was fortunate in having veterans in tackles Fran Morelli ’61
and Charlie Ehin ’60, guards Joe Wignot ’60, the captain, and
Frank Rowan ’60 and center Jim McComish ’60. From there
on out, though, it was anybody’s war for positions. Up from
the 1958 frosh charged a half dozen men who rated more than
a second look: tackle Paul Jolie, center Rick Riccardi and
guards Dick Beardsley, Stu Benedict, Dave Buran and Ken
Kerr. This latter quartet was particularly eye-catching.
Fears about tackle depth clouded this picture a bit but the
big problem was the ends. For the first time since World War
Two, Colgate had no ends of the likes of Al Fassnacht ’50,
Karl Kluckhohn ’52, Gary Chandler ’54 or Al Jamison ’59.
The problem called for considerable work because blocking
at the end was essential to the new attack; the pass catching
could be shared by the halfbacks. If there was one place the
coaches felt could thwart the new attack, it had to be at end.
Whatever the problems, there seems to be a disposition to
get the job done. The Raiders reported for practice in
September in high spirits and in good shape as though to say,
''W e came to play.” Their willingness to learn was refreshing.
Even the murderous heat and humidity of the first weeks failed
to dull their edge. Generally, they adapted themselves to each
situation as it arose and, for the first few weeks at least, they
topped every problem.
The way they went about absorbing their lessons prompted
one wag to dub them ''a thinking man’s team.” You’ve got
to think to survive in football today.
New Stands
•A new 4,600-seat grandstand providing
the latest in comfort for Colgate foot
ball fans was erected on the east side of
the athletic field during the summer. The
new stand, which completes the renova
tion of the stadium, was in use for the
Cornell Homecoming game and drew
compliments from many fans, especially
from Cornell followers who remembered
with some misgivings the former bleach
ers that had greeted them during their in
frequent visits.
Colgate's new offense depends heavily on such
backs as, left to right, Halfback Jacque MacKin
non '62, Dover, New Jersey; Quarterback Bob
Paske '61, Buffalo; Fullback Bernie Dailey '60,
Gouverneur, and Halfback John Maloney '61,
New York City
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
21
Flashes
Classes
J ulius A. M igel
Charlestown, R. I.
The Rev. U lysses G. Robinson ’91, retired
Baptist clergyman who lives with a nurse and
his long-time secretary in Atlantic City, is
credited with being the first man in America
to advocate, in 1930, a nationwide system of
toll superhighways. Supporters of his plan
were told at the time that the American people
would never pay to ride on a road!
Clayton G. M abey
27 Riverside
Sidney, N. Y.
Congratulations to Dr. and Mrs. A sa Z adel
H all, who celebrated their fiftieth wedding
anniversary with 18 relatives and several friends
on July 29 on the lawn of W est Canoga Bap
tist Chapel, a new mission in Canoga Park,
Calif. Dr. Hall, for many years a medical
missionary at home and abroad, later practiced
medicine in Colorado and Tennessee, and mov
ed to California after retirement. Judge Everett
H. Bowen ’03 of Pomona, who roomed next to
Dr. Hall at Colgate, and Mrs. Bowen were
among the guests.
Berton A. G arrett
50 McLean St.
Ballston Spa., N . Y.
Letters have been received during the sum
mer from several members of the class who
were unable to attend their sixtieth reunion in
June. Berton A. G arrett wrote that since
he alone represented the class at the 55th re
union, he and Mrs. Garrett were in an auto
mobile accident which crippled her for life
and put an end to his driving. He also wrote
that the only other living graduate in the class
is now the Rev. W alter C. M ason , still ac
tive in the ministry as supply pastor for a little
church in Arvin, Calif. The Rev. G eorge K.
H am ilton , oldest living non-graduate in the
class, wrote that because he has suffered two
mild coronary attacks, his physician advised
against the trip, but that he continues to try to
express his growing and deepening affection for
Colgate by interesting young men of promise
in the College. Now retired, he and Mrs.
Hamilton are living quietly in their own home
in Dundee. The Rev. W alter C. M ason ,
living in Claremont, Calif., wrote that "in these
days of inflated wages and deflated salaries,”
such a long trip was out of the question.
E mery A. Bauer
34 Russell Rd.
Falmouth, Mass.
John P. Benedict, son of the Rev. and Mrs.
Ivan H. Benedict of 26 Ballard Dr., W .
Hartford, Conn., was killed on June 12 in a
plane creash near Yellow Springs, Ohio. He
was vice-president of the Yellow Springs In
strument Co. and held the rank of captain in
the Air Force.
22
C.
P. Christopher S’05, although retired
and living in Attleboro, Mass., keeps busy with
interim preaching and the chairmanship of
the program committe of the Senior Fellowship
of Greater Boston. He had served churches
in Massachusetts and Rhode Island for 43
years and had been Secretary of the Taunton
Council of Churches and President of the
Rhode Island Baptist State Convention.
j
J. H oward and Mrs. H utchinson made a
quick trip East from the W est Coast in the
early summer.
J. A. M igel, 1959 Alumni Fund Class
Chairman, reports that while the sum subscrib
ed by members of the class is not large, it
represents almost 100 per cent participation by
the living graduates of the class. Gifts from
five non-graduates are also included. Credit
for this success must also go to the Assistant
Chairmen, J. H oward H utchinson and Les
ter G. Sim on .
J. A. M igel and his wife made a 12,000mile auto trip last winter to visit their five
children and 13 grandchildren. Among the
former are H amilton M igel 34, vice-presi
dent in charge of engineering of the Magnaflux
Co. of Chicago, 111., and D auchy M igel ’35,
M.D., F.A.C.S., of Idaho Falls, Idaho. W hile
in Arizona they had a weekend reunion with
J. H oward and Mrs. H utchinson 05. The
Migels also visited Mexico, Bryce and Zion
Canyons and Williamsburg, Va.
W . Ly n n H ouseman
616 Lake Como Circle
Orlando, Fla.
W . Ly n n and Mrs. H ouseman have moved
form Geneva to Florida, where their address is
616 Lake Como Circle, Orlando.
W illiam B. D unning
114 S. Fulton St.
Auburn, N. Y.
H omer L. D odge, president emeritus of
Norwich University, now has the distinction of
having transited the Eisenhower Lock of the St.
Lawrence Seaway in both the smallest boat and
one of the largest ships to pass through. A
year ago last July 4 he paddled his canoe
through the lock when the U. S. section of the
Seaway was opened; this summer he was a
guest of the U. S. Navy on the USS Macon,
flagship of the Operation Inland Seas.
Stanley E. Baldwin
635 Berkeley Ave.
Claremont, Calif.
Stanley E. Baldwin , retired and living in
Claremont, Calif., represented Colgate on Sep
tember 18 at the inauguration of the new
Chancellor of the University of California at
Santa Barbara.
’15
Frank C. Carpenter
Fly Creek
Otsego County RD, N. Y.
D avid F. K irby and Mrs. Kirby have been
patients in a nursing home at 15 Woodcrest
Ave., W hite Plains, for the past year.
Lyndon H. Strough
108 E. Garden St.
Rome, N . Y.
Leland E. Becraft has moved to Rapid
City, S. D., where he is associated with the
Community Chest. H e resides at 2726 Lanark
Rd.
M ervin T. F lock, Production and Procure
ment Manager for the DeLaval Steam Turbine
Co. of Trenton, N. J., is serving as Chairman
of the Industrial Division of the Delaware
Valley United Fund this year.
Miss Anne Marie Reid, daughter of the late
W illiam A. Reid, was married on August 15
to Fergus Martin Sloan, Jr. in W . Orange,
N. J., and is now living at 411 E. 53rd St.,
New York.
P errine G. R ockafellow
Hamilton, N . Y.
C layton E. Rose of Albany, who has been
public relations director of the New York State
Teachers Association, has been elected presi
dent of the National School Public Relations
Association.
A very J. Sinclair
167 Clifton PI.
Syracuse 6, N . Y.
' D onald C. Stone , Dean of the Graduate
School of Public and International Affairs of
the University of Pittsburgh, is serving on the
Social Relations Symposium of the Regional
Commission on Interrelationships of Secondary
Schools, Colleges and Professional Schools.
O rrin G. J udd
275 Clinton Ave.
Brooklyn 17, N . Y.
O rrin G. J udd has been named by Gov
ernor Rockefeller as chairman of an advisory
council to administer the State’s new labor law.
W illiam A. K ern
10 Franklin St.
Rochester 4, N. Y.
H arold K. W ood, attorney for the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania since 1957, has been
sworn in as a U. S. District Judge.
J o h n G. K auderer, J r.
110 Morningside Dr.
New York 27. N. Y.
C harles M. Fistere has announced the
formation of partnership with Benjamin G.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
Habberton under the firm name Fistere and
Habberton for the practice of law in W ash
ington, D. C.
J ohn G. K auderer has a son and a daugh
ter both entering the medical profession. His
daughter, Mrs. Janet Reid Hutchinson, is pres
ently interning at George W ashington Medical
Center in Washington, D. C .; his son, Jack,
graduated from Columbia College in June and
entered Columbia College of Physicians and
Surgeons in September.
J ames Stafford, class poet, lawyer and Jus
tice of the Peace in Weedsport, is alleged to
hold the record for more accidents than any
other Colgate man! In April he demolished a
car, came to under it, was discharged from the
hospital next day — his doctor, Bill Dorr ’30;
two weeks before he had slammed into a panel
truck that rammed a lawyer’s car; two years
ago he hit a tree, went through the windshield;
three years ago, he hit a bridge over the Seneca
River; not to mention 15 other accidents.
Weedsport calls him "the cat with nine lives.”
Jim says, "As Police Justice, my face is red!
I wish the one-horse shay had never fallen
apart.”
V l J
immdjr
G. W endell K ellogg
Rock River M. E. Conf.
77 W . W ashington St.
Chicago 2, 111.
W alter J. B ullock , who has completed 23
years with E. R. Squibb and Sons, has trans
ferred from the Quality Control Division to the
Research Division to become Supervisor in
Ultraviolet and Polarographic work.
Arthur S. H arper has been elected VicePresident of Lionel D. Edie and Co., New York
investment counsel and economic consulting
firm, of which Lionel Edie ’15 is Chairman of
the Board.
W endell K ellogg is director of the Board
of Public Relations of the Rock River Con
ference (Chicago area) of the Methodist
Church.
Archibald A. P atton has been named a
director of McKinsey and Co., Chicago, 111.
On August 1 the Rev. H ugh E. Replogle
became Rector of St. Matthew’s Episcopal
Church, Moravia, and Priest-in-Charge of St.
Ambrose’s Church, Groton.
Raymond H. Skinner is starting his second
year at the 4th USASA Field Station in Asmara,
Eritrea, Africa. This year he is teaching high
school mathematics at the Kagnew Station De
pendent School, an accredited high school of
the Dependent Education Group of Europe.
Robert F. H ofheins
1234 Broadway
Buffalo 12, N . Y.
T homas D. M ackey, J r. has been appointed
Staff Supervisor for the Massachusetts Mutual
Life Insurance Company’s agency in New York
City.
N ath a n A. T ufts , Jr.
Johnson and Lewis
1680 N . Vine St.
Hollywood 28, Calif.
E. W esley O liver, J r . has become Presi
dent of Palmer and Oliver, Inc., printers and
lithographers in Woodside. His residence is
at 266 Huntington Bay Rd., Huntington.
L. K ingsley Smith has recently been induct
ed in Mineola as a District Court Judge for the
County of Nassau.
B erton W . Sw eet is a member of the sales
department of the Mohawk Valley Paper Co.
in Little Falls, where he lives at 15 W . Gansevoort St.
A lbert L. Lawrence
246 N. Main St.
Herkimer, N . Y.
I saac H. M unro has been elected VicePresident, Marketing, by Allied Chemical
Corporation. He will also continue as Presi
dent of the Solvay Process Division. He re
sides at 1 Secor Dr., Port Washington.
N athaniel J. Sw an , J r. is Vice-President
and General Manager of Rutland’s in Clear
water, Fla., where he lives at 1873 McKinley.
Edward L. V olkwein has left San Francisco
and is now Vice-President of Foremost Dairies
in Jacksonville, Fla., where he lives at 5071
Yacht Club Rd.
Richard S. B uell
70 Rockledge Ave.
Bronxville, N. Y.
T V Guide magazine has named D avid
Lichtenberg to the post of Retail Sales Man
ager with the national circulation department.
B art A mendola
3921 River Rd.
Reading, Pa.
Charles W . Laffin was appointed in July
as Vice-President and Dean of the Faculty of
the Nassau County Community College and
has been serving as acting executive head until
a president is appointed. He has been VicePresident of the New York City Community
College of Applied Arts and Sciences in Brook
lyn.
249 Pondfield Rd.
Bronxville 8, N . Y.
Living at 66 Central St., Andover, Mass.,
C harles J. B urton is Vice-President of Avco
Research and Advertising Development D ivi
sion in Wilmington, Mass.
J ohn D. M arks has been re-elected to the
Board of Directors of the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers.
Miss Phoebe Mary Terry, daughter of D o n
M. T erry, was married on June 27 in
Plattsburgh to Richard Andrew Lumsden, Jr.
J o h n D. La Belle of Manchester, Conn.,
has been appointed State’s Attorney for Hart
ford.
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
An alumnus of the Class of 1925 has
returned to the Library a book which he
withdrew in fune, 1924. Happy to have
it back, since it was Volume 1 of a twovolume set, the late Mr. Hams waived the
fine which would have aggregated ap
proximately $576.80.
memos carried the above
item in the December, 1957, issue
of the News. On April 8, 1959, proof
that Memos are read came in the form of
a letter from the alumnus who returned
the book. Addressed to the Librarian, his
communication read, in part:
"Now, Mr. Iiams, why be so pessimis
tic about collecting that fine? I think it
will be possible for you to get it if you’re
not in a hurry. Tell you what I’ll do.
I’ll add a codicil to my will leaving $1,000
to Colgate. If I die within the next few
years you’ll not only collect the fine but a
little interest to boot. If I live quite a
while, you’ll collect your $576.80 with
some interest but at a progressively lower
rate.”
Mr. Iiams responded that "if all alumni
paid their fines on books 'removed’ from
the Library when they were undergradu
ates, we could finish the second floor and
have enough left over to endow the pur
chase of new books!” But, considering
the terms of payment, he hoped it would
not be paid for 50 years.
The protagonist of this little exchange
wishes to remain "Alumnus of the Class
of 1925”.
aroon
M
K irby P eake
Edward M. D arrow , Vice-President and
General Manager of the C. O. Miller Co. of
Stamford, Conn., has headed the commercial
and financial division of the United Fund of
Stamford this year.
ald
T ake Y our Time!
K irby P eake has left Vick Chemical Co.,
where he was President of the Vick Products
Division, to become Administrative Vice-Presi
dent of Carter Products, Inc., at 2 Park Ave.,
New York City.
W . Banks T obey is Associate Director of
the public relations and fund raising firm
Tamblyn and Brown, Inc., of New York. He
resides at 406 Grandview Ave., Wyckoff, N. J.
G eorge M. V adas, who has served the
Veterans Administration from coast to coast in
various capacities, has recently been named
Manager of the Albany VA Regional office.
He resides at 9A Old Hickory Dr.
23
’38
D ana O. M ozley
2025 Broadway
New York 23, N. Y.
H. M arvin H osier, former manager of the
Charleroi, Pa., plant of the Corning Glass
Works, has been transferred to Corning to be
manager of the Consumer Product Division.
The Charleroi plant is an operating unit of that
division.
Raytheon Co. has named A llen W . M erRIAM, J r. District Manager for Northern Cali
fornia in its Distributor Products Division,
with headquarters in San Mateo.
H. G uyford Stever of Cambridge, Mass.,
represented Colgate on September 8 at the in
auguration of the new President of Northeast
ern University in Boston, Mass.
V eikko E. T urevon is a salesman for the
Corning Glass Works in Corning, where he
lives at 178 Pritchard Ave.
’39
J. Frederic M artin
8726 Constance Lane
Brentwood Village
Cincinnati, Ohio
J o h n P. A tkinson has been promoted by
IBM from Assistant Director of Personnel to
Product Manager, General Products, Data
Processing Division, in W hite Plains.
Edward J. (N ed ) G arvey has rejoined J.
M. Mathes, Inc., of New York City after a
brief separation from the firm, as Vice-Presi
dent in charge of the agency’s Soft Goods and
Home Furnishings Division.
H arry M. K ammire , Secretary of the Hunt
Furniture Co., Inc., of Salamanca, has been ap
pointed District Commissioner for the W estern
District of Seneca Council Boy Scouts.
’40
C harles J. H ughes, J r .
Madison, N. Y.
G eorge W . B aker, who is Deputy Director
of Purchase and Administrative Services De
partment of the Port of New York Authority,
has been unanimously elected President of the
Purchasing Agents Association of New York.
He lives at Brightwaters.
Transferred by Atlantic Refining Co., R ob
ert E. G lendening is now District Manager
in Binghamton. He resides at 413 Corey Ave.,
Johnson City.
H arry E. M aynard, U. S. Advertising Man
ager for Life International Editions since 1954,
has been appointed to the new post of Associ
ate Advertising Director.
Edward J. V an D yke of Narberth, Pa., has
again received the National Quality Award
given by the National Association of Life Un
derwriters and the Life Insurance Management
Association. H e is associated with the Penn
Mutual Life Insurance Co. in Philadelphia.
’41
G aston E. Blom
7 South Lane
Cherry Hills Village
Englewood, Colo.
Lawrence H. G erson , J r . is Manager of
Administrative Services at the Case Institute of
Technology in Cleveland, Ohio. His home is
at 33675 Chagrin Blvd., Chagrin Falls.
24
IBM has appointed J oh n J. K enney , J r . as
Product Manager, Data Systems, for the Data
Processing Division of International Business
Machines Corp. in W hite Plains. He joined
the company in 1941.
The Rev. Robert G. M iddleton received an
honorary degree from Ottawa University in
June, when he delivered the address at the
university’s commencement exercises.
W ashington representative for the United
Aircraft Corp., D onald W . T hompson is
living there at 4808 Scarsdale Rd.
J ames E. W atson , III of Fairmont, W . Va.,
represented Colgate on October 3 at the inaugu
ration of the new President of W est Virginia
University in Morgantown.
J o h n D. Y oung has become a senior con
sultant for McKinsey and Co. in Washington,
D. C.
’42
J o h n C. Craig
Bank of America
P. O. Box 4390
Beirut, Lebanon
The Rev. Claude C. Boydston is Rector of
St. Stephan’s Episcopal Church in San Luis
Obispo, Calif., where his home is at 312 Santa
Lucia Dr.
H enry A. C urtis is Assistant Professor of
Education at Hofstra College in Hempstead. He
resides in Roslyn Heights at 97 MacGregor
Ave.
’43
Richard F. Cleary, J r.
26 DeHart Rd.
Maplewood, N. J.
A lexander R. C hambers, J r. has been pro
moted by A. R. Chambers and Son, Inc., of
Pittsburgh, Pa., to President and Treasurer of
the company. He lives on Shady Oak Circle,
Allison Park.
Presently employed by American-Standard as
Manager of the brass plant in Louisville, Ky.,
A lfred F. D uemler , J r. resides at 3313 Eagle
Pass Rd.
J ames R. H oel is an account executive for
the NBC-TV spot sales staff in Chicago. He
has been sales manager of Station W TCN-TV,
Minneapolis, St. Paul.
Huberth and Huberth, Inc., New York real
estate firm, has named H arry G. H uberth ,
J r . President and a Director.
J ames N. Lazear is associated with the
Product Design Co., makers of Scientific teach
ing aids and educational materials, in Redwood
City, Calif. He is living at 3540 Greer Rd.,
Palo Alto.
J ames N. Siegfried of Bound Brook, N. J.,
has been named a Section Chief at the JohnsManville Research Center.
W illiam A. Slater is an account executive
for W FGA-TV in Jacksonville, Fla., where he
resides at 1515 Marco Pi.
’44
J o h n M uyskens
11 Jay St.
Canton, N. Y.
Stuart R. C larkson has become Assistant
Director, Conference and Public Information
Division, National Industrial Conference Board,
New York City.
I
E llsworth P. J ohnson is now associated
with Joseph Bancroft and Sons, Co., in W il
mington, Del., heading the Bon-Ton Division.
H e resides at 1303 Oberlin Rd.
Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., has
appointed Lester G. Loomis , former VicePresident of the George Hall Corp. in Ogdensburg, Director of University Finance.
r
Production Manager for Pratt, Read and Co.,
Inc., piano keys and actions, Ivory ton, Conn.,
H enry D. T owers lives at Book Hill, Essex.
Robert A. W ard is working for the Redwood Travel Advisors in San Rafael, Calif.,
where he lives at 34 Grove St.
I
j
Transferred from New Jersey, W illard M.
W ight is now Associate Manager of the Aetna
Insurance Co. in Buffalo. He resides at 178
Meadowbrook Rd., Orchard Park.
!
:
’45
Copley B urket
7910 W . 26th St.
N orth Riverside, 111.
P rescott N. Crane is Manager of Finance
at the National Broadcasting Co. in Burbank,
Calif. His home is at 11609 Hesby, N. Holly
wood.
Jean, wife of P erry A. T hompson , died on
August 9 after a very short illness. Perry
writes that his address remains the same, 67
Memorial Dr., Amherst, Mass., and that "my
daughter, Jane, age 10, and I are making out
as well as possible under the circumstances.”
Perry is Vice-President of Orange Manufactur
ing Co., rainwear manufacturers.
’46
Randall W . Baer
Route 2, Box 260C
Wayzata, Minn.
The Rev. G eorge A. Bishop has accepted
the pastorate of the First Baptist Church of
Hudson Falls, after service as Assistant Pastor
in the First Presbyterian Church of Oneida.
Cecil C. G amwell , III has returned from I
Venezuela and is now with the American Life
Insurance Co. at 825 Washington St., Wilm- I
ington, Dela.
J ohn Sellon , III is Property Manager for
the City of Dallas, Texas, where he resides at
4808 Drexel.
’47
T homas H ogan, iv
313 E. Genesee St.
Fayetteville, N . Y.
Dr. J o h n J. K ovaric has been promoted to
the rank of Major and is now Chief of Surgery
at the Ft. Monroe Hospital, Ft. Monroe, Va.
G eorge W . M adsen, J r. has a new position
as Assistant Editor of the Aspen {Colo.)
Times.
N eal R. M ontanus has returned to the
Port of New York Authority as Special Assis
tant to the Executive Director after a leave of
absence to work at the Brussel’s W orld Fair.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
'S
A
’48
m l
Lester W . Rice
2 Oak Tree Lane
Ashland, Mass.
D ouglas R. Brash has been associated with
the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, 1818 H St., N. W ., Washington,
D. C., since the spring. His new assignment
will require a great deal of travel in foreign
lands. H e is on leave of absence from Smith,
Barney and Co., New York City, with which
he has been associated since 1952.
A promotion for R obert W . Erickson —
to the position of General Traffic Supervisor
for the W estern Pennsylvania area of the Bell
Telephone Co., with headquarters in Pittsburgh.
J ohn P. F ries is assistant manager of the J.
C. Penney Co. retail store in Kalamazoo, Mich.,
where he lives at 742 Norton Dr.
BROOKS BROTHERS TO VISIT
THIRTY-THREE CITIES THIS FALL
O ur Travelling Representatives will display our
Suits, priced from $85j Sport Jackets, from $60j
and Furnishings...as specified below. We invite you
to come in and place your orders during these visits.
Albany—Sheraton-Ten Eyck
Robert J. H art is associated with the U. S.
Atomic Energy Commission in Washington,
D. C., as Chief of the Contract and Policy Re
view Section. His home is at 24513 Woodfield Rd., Damascus, Md.
Atlanta—Dinkler-Plaza
A member of the faculty of Albany State
Teachers College, G eorge P. W hitney is liv
ing at 233 W . Main St., Frankfort.
Birmingham—Dinkler-Tutwiler
Robert L. G ardner
5821 Woolman Ct.
U nit 9A
Cleveland 30, Ohio
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. has transfer
red J oh n P. A nthony from Pennsylvania to
Connecticut, where he is Field Representative.
His home is at 82 Wedgewood Dr., Manches
ter.
Charles V. Ball has been promoted by the
Pro-phy-lac-tic Brush Co. in Florence, Mass., to
buyer of plastic molds, plastic machinery arid
certain raw materials.
W illiam J. B ittles, J r . has been named
District Manager in Maine for Shell Oil Co.,
with headquarters in Portland. He has been
with the company since 1949.
An account executive for the advertising
firm, Reincke, Meyer and Finn of Chicago, 111.,
D onald O. B liss lives at 830 N . State St.
Dr. G eorge P. N. B oolukos is a Fellow in
Surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
He lives at 1010 W . Center St.
Bob D elehanty has returned to Somerset
Importers of which company he is Vice-Presi
dent and a Director. Bob visited the campus
last summer for the first time since 1952.
D ean H. H ammond , who has worked for
the Texas Petroleum Co. since graduation, has
been transferred from N. Dakota to Bogota,
Colombia, S. A. His address there is Calle
llOA, 5-92.
Socony Mobil Oil Co. has transferred Ray
L. O tis from Buffalo to Wausau, Wis.,
where he is Area Manager. His home is in
Rothschild, at 515 Lawrence Ave.
mond
T heobald Richardson has been transferred
by Carter Oil Co. from S. Dak. to Bismarck,
N. Dak., where he is District Manager. He
lives at 1420 11th St. N.
(Continued on next page)
FOR OCTOBER,
1959
Kansas City (Kansas)— Toccn House
Nov. 17, 18
Oct. 22, 23
Louisville—Broun Hotel
Nov. 9, 10,11
Baltimore—Southern Hotel
Oct. 8,9,10
Memphis—Hotel Peabody
Oct. 26, 27
Nov. 12, 13, 14
Buffalo—Hotel Statler
> 49
,
Oct. 5 ,6
Minneapolis—Radisson Hotel
Oct. 24, 26} Nov. 30} Dec. 1
New Orleans —Roosevelt Hotel
Oct. 13, 14} Nov. 10, 11
Charlotte —Hotel Charlotte
Nov. 16, 17, 18
Om aha—Sheraton-Fontenelle
Nov. S, 6
Cincinnati—X etherland-Hilton
Oct. 12, 13, 14} Nov. 11, 12, 13
Cleveland —Hotel Statler
Oct. 9, 10, 12} Nov. 6, 7,9
Col um bus—Deshler-Hilton
Nov. 27, 28
Philadelphia—Bellevue-Stratjord
Oct. 22,23, 24
Pittsburgh—Penn-Sheraton
Sept. 29, 30} Oct. 1, 2, 27, 28, 29
Richmond—Jefferson Hotel
Oct. 7,8} Nov. 9, 10
Dallas —Adolphus Hotel
Oct. 1, 2, 3
Dayton — Van Cleve Hotel
Oct. 9, 10; Nov. 6, 7
Denver—Brozcn Palace
Oct. 19,20,21
Detroit—Sh eraton-Cadillac
Oct. 3, 5,6,30,31} Nov. 2, 3
Hartford —Hotel Statler
Nov. 2, 3
Rochester—Hotel Sheraton
Oct. 15, 16} Nov. 12,T3
San Antonio—Gunter Hotel
Sept. 28, 29
St. Louis—Hotel Statler
Oct. 15, 16, 17} Nov. 14, 16, 17
Syracuse —Hotel Syracuse
Nov. 14, 16
Capt. Frederic A. Stone has completed his
four-year general surgery residency in Cali
fornia and took up his new assignment at the
837th Tactical Hospital, Shaw AFB, S. C., on
August 1.
General Electric Co., Hotpoint Division, has
transferred A lan T. W alton from New York
to Chicago, 111., where he is Sales Planning
Manager. He lives in W ilmette at 800 Elm
wood Ave.
J p»
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I
Frederick H. D unlap
W arren Rd., R.D. 1
Ithaca, N . Y.
A foreign service officer, W illiam A nder
son , J r . is Third Secretary in the American
Embassy, Oslo, Norway.
Richard M. Bennett has been appointed
Controller of the Data Processing Division of
International Business Machines Corp. in
W hite Plains.
J ames K. C ullen has been promoted by
Keuffel and Esser of Hoboken, N . J., engineer
ing supplies, to the position of Director of
Sales and Promotion. He resides in Engle
wood at 143 Engle St.
Assistant Secretary of the Central Foundry Co.
of Newark, N. J., C harles R. F reytag resides
at Lake Mohawk, Sparta.
A salesman for Johns-Mansville Sales Corp.,
R ichard C. H arden has been transferred from
Canton to New Hartford.
P eter J. La V alle of Texas City, Texas, is
presently State Representative for District 21.
R obert R. Lovegren was recently honored
by the Department of the Interior. H e was in
cluded among the outstanding employees selec
ted to be recognized in a booklet titled "Career
Profiles.”
K en neth F. P hillips is now associated
with the law firm Feldman and O ’Donnell in
San Francisco, Calif.
D onald W . R ush is now the pastor of the
Epworth Methodist Church in Elmira, where
he lives at 358 Thurston St.
Edward F. T homas is employed by the
Twin Disc Clutch Co. in Rockford, 111., as a
mathematician.
W arren L. T hompson is Vice-President of
the George K. Hauck Agency, Inc., insurance
firm, in Burlington, Vt.
E. V irgil Conway
115 W illow St.
Brooklyn 1, N. Y.
V ernon H. B lackman is Technical Direc
tor for M H D Research, Inc., Newport Beach,
Calif.
D onald J. G rabowski has been employed
by R. H. Donnelley Corp. and has been as
signed to the Utica-Syracuse area.
Ralph A. H arper is practicing law with the
firm Vinson-Elkins-Weems and Searls in Hous
ton, Texas, where he lives at 6009 Charlotte.
26
Lt. J ames M. M iller is stationed at the
U. S. Public Health Service Hospital in Balti
more, Md., where he is Senior Assistant Sur
geon.
D avid L. P routy , who finished work for
his Ph.D. at Tulane during the summer, is
now teaching psychology at Middlebury Col
lege.
J o h n D. S. R ussell, J r ., who received a
Ph.D. degree from Rutgers University in June,
is now an instructor in English at the Univer
sity of South Carolina. He resides at 1520
Madison Ave., Florence.
D ick Schubert , who has been in the Public
Relations Department of the New Jersey Bell
Telephone Co., has been transferred to Bell
Telephone Laboratories, New York City.
W illiam P. W aggener has become a mem
ber of the law firm Lewis, Grant and Davis in
Denver, Colo., where he lives at 845 Gaylord
St.
Ralph M. W illiams is an Instructor in the
History Department of the W est Seneca Cen
tral High School. He lives in Buffalo at 177
Lincroft Rd.
} ^
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J
Vm
T homas G. A rmstrong
Grey Adv. Agency, Inc.
430 Park Ave.
New York 22, N. Y.
E ugene M. Becker completed work for his
Ph.D. at Princeton University in June and has
joined the staff of the Frick Collection in
New York City.
Bernard L. Clausen , now a graduate stu
dent in the Department of Conservation, School
of Natural Resources, at the University of
Michigan, has received a Commendation of the
Soil Conservation Society of America. H e will/
teach at the Iowa State Teacher’s College thi$_
year.
J an T. D e J ong served during the summer
as conductor for the San Leandro (Calif.)
Summer Music Workshop.
Employed in the Sales Department of
Readers Digest, Pleasantville, R oyal F. P ot
ter , J r . is living at 211 Schrade Rd., Briarcliff Manor.
An accountant for the Imperial Color Chem
ical and Paper Corp. of Glens Falls, K eith
B. M ountain is living at 44 Glen St.
R oy W . Schurmann is now Personnel D i
rector for Hitemp W ires, Inc., of Westbury.
W alter M. Shields, J r . is now Assistant
Sales Manager for Reynolds Metals Co. of
Richmond, Va.
Dr. Stewart B. W hitmarsh has opened
his office for the practice of dentistry at 6005
W . 16th St., Lakewood, Colo.
J o h n R. W ilson is Mid-west Sales Man
ager for the Continental Broadcasting Co. of
Chicago, 111., where he lives at 1127 N. Dear
born St.
K en n eth M. H unt
772 W oodlawn Rd.
Steubenville, Ohio
D aniel F. Barker is Internal Auditor r a r
the Container Corp. of America in Chicago,
111., where he lives at 165 W . Schiller St. He
recently received the master of business ad
ministration degree from Harvard University.
R obert P. C harles of 593 Park Plaza, Glen
Ellyn, 111., is a salesman for the American
Banknote Co. of Chicago.
A rnold T. K och , J r. has been transferred
by the General Electric Co. from Syracuse to
its Public Relations Department in Philadel
phia, Pa.
The W right Line, Inc., data processing ac
cessories, has transferred Conrad C. K ohlheyer from New Jersey to Buffalo, where he
is Branch Manager. He lives at 3486 Wehrle
Dr., Clarence.
A letter received on campus recently from
Friedrich K roneck , A. M. ’53, says in part:
"I was asked by our Foreign Ministry to apply
for the Foreign Service. I did so, and after
two examinations was appointed Attache with
the German Foreign Service. D ieter H oelscher ’52, who applied also, was appointed to
gether with me. There are now, therefore,
two Colgate men in the German Foreign Ser
vice. It might be interesting to you that out of
1900 applicants only 26 were accepted. Dieter
and I think that our success is to a great ex
tent due to our stay in the United States and
to the excellent education which we got at
Colgate . . . ”
A contract administrator for Iitton Indus
tries of Maryland in College Park, Md., A.
Richard M alkin is living at 10408 Montrose
Ave., Bethesda.
Owner of the moving and storage firm, B.
and B. Trucking Co. in Ramsey, N. J., Rob
ert R. M eehan lives at 56 Meadowbrook Rd.
He was awarded the LL.B degree by Rutgers
University in June.
D ouglas W . Rankin is Assistant Professor
of Geology at Vanderbilt University and lives
at 2907 Sharon Hill Circle, Nashville, Tenn.
A Field Engineer for IBM, K en neth W.
Snow has been transferred from California to
Kingston, where he resides at 66 Pearl St.
Living at 35 S. Broadway, Irvington-onHudson, T homas M. V incent is Assistant
Production Manager for Colgate-Palmolive Co.,
New York City.
J erome L. W ilson has been named Assis
tant Public Relations Director of the National
Urban League, Inc., New York City, inter
racial, education service agency.
He had
worked with the League in a volunteer capacity
before accepting this permanent position.
} r^
A
r
W illiam M. Branch , J r.
274 Churchil Rd.
Northfield, 111.
The Rev. W . Cameron A llan , ordained a
Presbyterian minister by the Westchester Pres
bytery, has been called to serve the Brewster
Presbyterian Church.
T yler M. Bartow , J r . is employed in the
Production Control Department of the Waste
King Corp., Los Angeles, Calif. His home is
in Huntington Park at 7018B Stafford Ave.
The Standard Oil Co. of Texas has trans
ferred M alcolm W . Boyce, geologist, from
San Angelo to Midland, where he lives at 3108
Roosevelt St.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
Working for the Aetna Life Insurance Co.
in Miami, Fla., E ugene H. Carpenter , II is
living in S. Miami at 5601 SW 76th St.
T homas E. Cole is a Production Supervisor
for the Corning Glass Works in Corning. His
home is at 109 E. Steuben St., Bath.
Charles A. Cooley has been appointed D i
rector of Development for the Academic Dis
ciplines at the University of Pittsburgh. He
went to Pittsburgh from The Hill School,
where he was Director of Development.
Under a grant from the University of Ox
ford, England, Raymond L. D isch , J r. is a
post-doctoral fellow doing scientific research
at the National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, Middlesex, England. H e lives at 2 Hurst
Rd., E. Molesey, Surrey, England.
Richard M. G ache is a sales executive for
W. S. Konecky Associates, lithographers, New
York City. H e lives in East Meadow at 2524
Beech St.
Dr. H ugh G. G regg is a resident in Radiol
ogy at the Columbia Presbyterian Medical
Center, New York City. H e resides at 777
Warburton Ave., Yonkers.
Living at 1708 Meadow Moor Dr., Salt Lake
City, Utah, Sidney B. H ill , J r . is a salesman
for the Gillette Co.
Dr. A rnold J. H odas has completed his
internship at the U. S. Naval Hospital, St.
Albans, and will be stationed for two years
at the U. S. Naval Air Station, S. Weymouth,
Mass. He has bought a house at 48 Louise
Rd., Holbrook.
W illiam G. Me D ermott is Texas Man
ager for the Pearl Assurance Co., Ltd., of D al
las, Texas. He lives at 6402 Oriole Dr., D al
las.
D onald A. N oville, J r . is a salesman for
Revere Copper and Brass, Inc., in Pittsburgh,
Pa., where he lives at 3406 Shadewell Ave.
CAREER
W ITH
C hristian J. D. Rote is Operations Man
ager for the Dalton Steamship Corp. in Gal
veston, Texas. His home is in Dickinson at
4920 Minnesota.
After three years in the Social Studies De
partment of the Clarence Central School, Law son A. R utherford is now at Teachers Col
lege, Columbia University, working for his
doctorate. His home is at 38 Palmer Ave.,
Bronxville.
Dr. C larke R uss has been granted the M.D.
degree by Albany Medical College.
Ronald E. Sapp has been appointed to the
Cleveland Group Pension office of Connecticut
General Life Insurance Co. and will make his
home at 1785 Sedalia Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.
He has recently been in the company’s home
office in Hartford, Conn.
Dr. T homas J. Scully is now a resident in
Pediatrics at the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Transferred from Milwaukee, Wis., W alter
C. W eissinger, J r . is Assistant Manager of the
New York Life Insurance Co. in Washington,
D. C. He resides at 10242 Parkwood Dr.,
Kensington, Md.
5
^
G eorge M urdock
100 Sunnycrest
Syracuse 6, N. Y.
Dr. T homas C. Carrier has completed his
work at the Cornell University Medical College
and is now interning at the Mary Hitchcock
Memorial Hospital, Hanover, N. H.
Louis G. C elano has completed his tour of
duty with the USAF and has rejoined IBM as
a Data Processing Division sales trainee. Lou,
his wife, Dottie, and their two daughters live
at 46 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow, Mass.
J o h n J. C lapp , III is a bond analyst for the
brokerage house, R. W . Pressprich and Co.,
New York City. His home is in Flushing at
141-05 Northern Blvd.
Charles H. Cole is a member of the New
Jersey State Police force and lives on Windemere Ave., Mt. Arlington.
Recently out of service, J ames F. D ineen
is presently employed by the Aetna Life Insur
ance Co. in Hartford, Conn., where he lives
at 1043 Capitol Ave.
2/L t. G ervase M. F lick has been elected
President of his fraternity, Iota Tau Sigma, at
the Kirksville, Mo., College of Osteopathy
and Surgery. The fraternity is the original
chapter of the oldest and largest osteopathic
medical fraternity. Gerry is also President
elect of the college’s Inter-Fraternity Council.
Samuel P. F rankel has become a partner
in the law firm Frankel and Frankel in
Schenectady.
Dr. H oward R. G oldstein received his
M.D. degree from Albany Medical College at
the end of the spring term and is now intern
ing at the Graduate Hospital of the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. H e re
sides at 737 Revere Rd., Yeadon.
Steph en R. H arvey
Harvey, Inc., wholesalers
ing replacement parts, in
home address is 667
Meadow.
is President of Sid
for automatic heat
Valley Stream. His
Bellmore Ave., E.
Dr. M iles K ahan has graduated from the
Chicago Medical School and is presently in
terning at Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn,
and living at 740 Clarkson Ave. At Com
mencement he received a Citation in recogni
tion of his valuable services on the staff of
The Quarterly.
Lt. Ramsay Lawson recently graduated first
in his class in the U. S. Navy Combat Informa
tion Center Radar Control Course at Bruns
wick, Ga., and is now serving as an instruc
tor. His address is 3101 Kemble Ave.
(Continued on next page)
The Sun Life of Canada, one of the world’s great life
insurance companies, offers men of ambition and integrity an
outstanding professional career in its expanding field
forces. If you are interested in a career with unlimited
opportunities, then Sun Life has the answer.
• E x p e r t C o n t in u o u s T r a in in g
A
FUTURE
• E x c e l le n t I n c o m e O p p o r t u n it y
• G e n e r o u s W e l f a r e B e n e f it s
For full information about a Sun Life sales career,
write to W. G. ATTRIDGE, Director of Agencies,
Sun Life of Canada, Montreal.
SUN L IFE A S S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y OF C A N A D A
COAST TO COAST IN THE UNITED STATES
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
27
Richard R. L utz , who received the LL.B.
degree from Harvard University in June, is
Assistant D. A. in the New York County D is
trict Attorney’s office in New York City. He
lives in W . Hempstead at 212 Oak St.
Living at 1539 Hewlett Ave., Hewlett, D o n
ald H. M arx is an assistant buyer for Abra
ham and Straus, department store of Brooklyn.
P eter H. M orrison is an attorney for the
Securities and Exchange Commission in W ash
ington, D. C. He lives at 7920 18th Ave.,
Adelphi, Md.
Released from the USAF in January, W il
liam F. N aumer is working for Bauer and
Black as a sales representative in the Provi
dence, R. {., area. H e resides with his wife
and son on Joann Dr., Barrington, R. I.
A salesman for the Radio Corp. of America,
W . J ames P ashley, J r . has been transferred
from N orth Carolina to Kansas City, Kan. He
lives in Prairie Village, Kan., at 7047 Linden
Rd.
Recently released from service,. Francis H.
P ince , J r . is working in the Planning Depart
ment of Bendix Aviation Co., Pioneer Eclipse
Division, in Teterboro, N. J. He lives at 796
Woodland Ave., Oradell.
G erald H. Stoller is a dental intern at
the Long Island Jewish Hospital. He received
the D.D.S. degree from Columbia University
School of Dental and Oral Surgery.
Steph en D. G oddard- is a registered repre
sentative for Hallgarten and Co., stock brok
ers of W all St., New York. H e resides at 45
Sutton PI. S.
H udson B. P hillips , J r . and J o h n A.
P hillips were ordained to the Christian minis
try on June 28 at the First Baptist Church in
Erie, Pa.
A lan J. G oldman is a partner in the firm
of R. J. Alan Associates, manufacturers, sales
representatives, in Providence, R. I. He lives
at 125 Fourth St.
Dr. G eorge L. Siegel has been granted the
M.D. degree by Albany Medical College.
D onald K. G reen is studying for the
Bachelor of Divinity degree at the Pacific
Lutheran Theological Seminary in Berkeley,
Calif.
J o h n B. H olloran , J r . is employed by the
Corning Glass Co., and is living at 1174
Sawyer St., New Bedford, Mass., while he
awaits permanent assignment to a sales ter
ritory.
Recently out of service, Edwin S. J anecek is
an Administrative Assistant in Industrial Rela
tions for Union Carbide Metals Co. in Mariet
ta, Ohio.
H ilary F. Snell , who graduated from the
University of Michigan Law School last June,
is now associated with the law firm of McCobb,
Heaney and Dunn in Grand Rapids.
—
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R obert Lindberg
80 Beekman Rd.
Summit, N . J.
Lt. (jg) Charles W . B ollinger is station
ed at Orange, Texas, on the USS Rowe while
that ship is being inactivated during the fall,
after which he expects to be assigned to a desk
job in Washington.
A First Lieutenant in the Air Force D oug
R. H oadley is presently stationed at
Barksdale AFB in Bossier City, La.
lass
J o h n C. O rmsby, who has been Instructor
in Social Studies at Haverling High School in
Bath, has been appointed to the new position
of Assistant to the Dean of Men at Stevens
Institute of Technology.
G eorge R. M ay, J r . is a sales trainee in
the IBM Data Processing Division in Pitts-
(Continued on page 30)
Richard R. Streeter has received the
Bachelor of Divinity degree from Princeton
Theological Seminary and has accepted a call
to be minister of the First Presbyterian Church
of Arkins, Ark.
Mapes and Sproul Steel Co. in Union, N. J.,
has employed Steph en A. T ie t je as a sales
man. His home is at 30 Gates Ave., Mont
clair.
Need
corrugated boxes
in volume?
Dr. Leon Brooke W alker, J r . was grad
uated from Jefferson Medical College in Phil
adelphia, Pa., in June and is now interning at
St. Luke’s Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio.
A salesman for Minnesota Mining and Manu
facturing Co., P eter R. W atts resides at 3
Vale Dr., Mountain Lakes, N. J.
F red W ells W ulfing of Richmond
Heights, Mo., received the Master of Busi
ness Administration degree from W ashington
University in June.
your
H&D packaging
engineer
Dr. R oger A. Y erry graduated first in a
class of 51 from Albany Medical College this
summer.
Frank Speno
Hamilton AFB
San Francisco, Calif.
MNDE&DAUCH
Two members of the class received the L.L.B.
degree from Harvard University in June. They
are Raeburn B. H athaway of Andover, Mass,
and M ichael R. Lemov of New York City.
Division of West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company
15 Factories, 42 S ales O ffices
Sandusky, O hio
Alcoa has recently transferred J o h n E.
Bower to the Dallas, Texas, district sales of
fice. He resides at 4115 A Bowser Ave.
H. P aul Comisar is an Associate in the
law firm, Leo F. Simpson, Jr., in Rochester,
where his home is at 232 Shaftsbury Rd.
28
^
-«»is. ¿m*.¿m*.
,
COLGATE
ALUM NI NEW S
Down the A isle
We regret that space limitations in this issue have made it necessary to restrict wedding announce
ments, customarily carried in some detail, to simple notices.
I
(
h
1927
J ames R. R ankin and Mary Lou Bishop,
on June 27 in Ossining.
E. Lucian G artman and Mrs. Mary Troxell,
on June 5 in Danbury, Conn.
J o h n R. Stenberg and Barbara H. Rudd,
in the early summer in Marblehead, Mass.
1939
K en n eth M. W ashburn and Ann Bryan
Conboy, last February 28 in Hannibal, Mo.
1958
W illiam H. Caprio and Carlene Ann Mihm,
in Rochester on June 13.
M ichael O. M oore and Patricia Luanne
Hill, in Cleveland, Ohio, on June 20.
C layton L. P arsons, J r . and Phyllis Ann
Rusmisell, in Gassaway, W . Va., on September
12 .
Raymond C. Stockholm and Joyce Lucille
Leabhard, on August 22 in Oak Park, 111.
1959
H oward C. B erky, J r . and Nancy Ruther
ford, in Belmont, Mass., during the summer.
Alan F. D oyle and Patricia Duffy of Bryn
Mawr, Pa., in New York City on June 27.
1955
1949
T homas R. Bopeley and June Smith, last
December 27 in Louisville, Ky.
Barry L. M aines and Patricia Ann Helms
of San Gabriel, Calif., on June 6.
J oseph B. C leaver and Marcella Keating in
Savannah, Ga., in June.
Frederick H. F laherty , III and Sue MacDougall Stephenson, in Lake George on July
25.
W illiam E. A bele and Margaret Ann
Bracey, in Dalton, Ga., on August 22.
R obert D. I les and Allidah Lee Schultz of
Miami, Fla., on July 25.
M artin A. Lerman and Grace Deutschmann, in Boston, Mass., on June 15.
1950
Richard J ohnson and Patricia Ann Temple,
in Garden City on August 22.
Robert G. Lewis, III and Aleida Bigelow
Phillips, in Westwood, N. J., on June 26.
J ohn M. C asson and Barbara Ann Tiller of
Denver on June 28.
Steph en M. M urphy and Gretchen A.
Rohrbach, on May 30 in Midland Park, N. J.
Robert N astanovich and Kathryn Calla
han, in Norwich on March 30.
A lbert Sitty and Kathleen Patricia Sugrue,
in New London, Conn., on May 30.
1956
R obert C. Skripak and Mary Elizabeth
Muller, on August 9, in Petersburg.
1952
Lt. H arry R. Critchley , J r . and June
Marshall of Teaneck, N. J., on January 24.
Robert B. W yckoff and Nancy French
Hale, in Pleasantville on June 13.
Craig B. Bright and Ann Sharpe of Ports
mouth, Va., on July 18.
P eter J. K ane and Georgiana Kalos, in
Bridgeport, Conn., on July 19.
Allan D. M oore and Lucille Hamjy of
Utica, on June 27 in the Colgate Rochester
Divinity Chapel.
J o h n L. K irkley and Jane K. Bell, in
Glendale, Calif., on May 31.
N orman W alker Smith and Lola Alio
Foster, in Hardwick, Vt., on August 8.
Louis C. T homas and Frances Ray Coleman
in Coral Gables, Fla., on June 19.
(
1953
D aniel F. Barker and Sandra Jean Dashner, in Springfield, Vt., on September 13.
Richard H. C ornell and Carolyn Rosen
thal of Menasha, Wis., on August 29H arvey V. D elapena , J r. and Joanne
Leslie Young, in Basking Ridge, N . J., on
August 15.
^ D onald C. Sanborn and Anne Cleveland
Turner-, 'on July 18 in Silver Bay.
1957
P eter E. C unningham and Susan Aborn,
in Red Bank on August 22.
Young Man with Mission
(Continued from page 8)
J o h n W . H asper and Diane King W ilson
in Scotia on July 18.
Corwin ’28) who believes a young man
should be left alone to select his own
career, and practices what he preaches;
and a grandfather who is delighted that
his grandson loves horses as much as he
does.
P eter H olmes and Ann-Britt Magnusson in
Salen, Sweden, on September 5.
W illiam V. K oenig and Patricia Ann
Harris, in Oneida on June 6.
H oward Lee and Fay Huie, in New York
City on June 20.
Steph en L. M arley, J r . and Corinne Anne
Marro, in Yorktown Heights on June 13.
1954
Edwin R. M oore, III and W ilda Rosen
dahl, in San Francisco, Calif., on June 6.
D avid R. G ardiner and Ruth A. Maynard,
-hr'Boston, Mass., on June 14.
W alter A. P reische, J r . and Carolyn A.
Davies, in Greenville, S. C., on June 8.
W illiam K. K eill and Elizabeth A. Marvin
on July 11.
Stuart J. U pdike and Karen Anna Kokvam,
in Kenosha, Wis., on June 26.
J ames N. Lloyd and Rachel Emily Adams,
in Hartford, Conn., on August 15.
J ohn M. W ithers and Rochette A. Sydnor,
at Towson, Md., on June 27.
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
1960
’ Robert L. Bradford and Carroll M. McCahan, in Red Hook on June 27.
Crawford M. H errick, J r . and Claudette
Schulze of Memphis, Tenn., on June 13.
r*
Robert W . Conklin and Barbara Ann
Pugliese, during the summer in Utica.
When this appears, Mike and his
family will have left Vernon Downs and
gone on to meets at Suffolk Downs in
Boston and at Rockingham Park, New
Hampshire, before leaving for winter
quarters in Pinehurst.
Shades of "Pop” Geers and "Doc”
Parshall; some day a Colgate man is go
ing to win the Hambletonian!
29
Recent A r rivals
1925
nouncer for Radio Station WDOS.
at 17 Linden Ave.
To P eter R. and M arian K imball , a fifth
child, Dana Paul, on July 9- This is the fourth
son for the Kimballs, who reside at 15 W ash
ington St., Topsfield, Mass.
1952
1936
To Robert and M arion Shaver, their first
daughter and third- child, Ann, on August 26.
Bob, a sales representative for Gulf Oil Corp.,
lives at 41 Briarcliff Rd., Merrick.
1940
To M alcolm and J ulie P ilsworth , J r . a
daughter, Nancy Ellen, on June 14. Malcolm
is a laboratory engineer for Landers, Frary and
Clark in New Britain, Conn., and resides at
96 Oaks Rd., Framingham.
1944
To W illiam and P atricia B urke , their
fourth child, John Michael, in Syracuse on
June 23. Bill and the family live in Hamil
ton, where he has his own law office.
To A rt and J ean C ooper , a son, Roy Alan,
on July 10. He joins brother Paul, 2, at their
home at 2640 Davis St., Raleigh, N. C., where
Art is assistant professor of botany at N orth
Carolina State University.
1948
To Leonard and M ary Shaw , a daughter,
Susan Lynne, on June 10 in Ashtabula, Ohio.
Busan has two brothers, Leonard 7, and Rob
ert 4. Leonard is manager of MontgomeryW ar d in Ashtabula.
1949
To D onald and J oann H ess, a second
daughter, Sandra Ann, on June 17 in Rochester,
where Don is field supervisor for the Travelers
Insurance Co. They live at 25 Aberdeen St.
1950
To R hys and M imi Roberts, their sixth
child, Hannah Carol, on May 19- A coach in
the Fayetteville High School, Rhys and his
family live at 306 E. Seneca St., Manlius.
1951
To Stewart and J oyce Bickn Ell , a second
daughter, Linda Carol, on July 16. Stewart is
-a plant cost accountant for Hewitt-Robins, Inc.,
of Fremont, Ohio, where they live at 612 June
St.
To J oe and Sally Campbell , a second son,
Jeffrey Scott, on June 11. Joe teaches in the
Oneonta public school system and is an an-
30
To J o h n and Lee A n n W ise, their first
child, a daughter, Catherine Marjorie, on July
10 in Jamestown, where John is a sales repre
sentative for Socony Mobil Oil Co., Inc.
They live
1957
To Dr. D aniel E. and A lice F ountain ,
their first child, a daughter, Katherine Eliza
beth, on June 20 in Birmingham, Ala. The
Fountains have finished their training in the
University of Alabama Medical Center and
have entered the Kennedy School of Missions
in Hartford, Conn.
To D ieter and G isela H oelscher, their
first child, a daughter, Uta, in Bunde in W est
falen, Germany, on June 23. He is an attache
in the German Foreign Service.
To Carl C. and G inny N eum ann , a son,
David Conrad, in Salem, Mass., on July 23 to
join sister Barbara, 7, and brother Scott, 4.
Carl is district group supervisor for the New
York Life Insurance Co, in Peabody, Mass.,
and the Neumanns live at 31 Reed Rd., W .
Peabody.
1953
To Dr. J. D onald and G ail Lucker, their
first child, Scott Donald, on June 15 in Cleve
land, Ohio. Don is Chief Resident in Pediat
rics at the University Hospitals of Cleveland
this year. They live at 10706 Shaker Blvd.
S. E.
To T om and Barbara V incent , their first
child, Thomas M., Jr., on June 2. Tom has
completed the training program in the House
hold Products Division of Colgate-Palmolive
Co., and at present is Assistant Brand Manager.
The Vincents reside at 25 Ingham Rd., Briarcliff Manor.
1954
To Dr. A rnold and Barbara
first child, Susan Leslie, on July
assigned to the U. S. Naval Air
Weymouth, Mass. They reside
Rd., Holbrook, Mass.
1956
H odas, their
25. Arnie is
Station in S.
at 48 Louise
To D ick and N ancy M e D onough , a
daughter, Janet Ryan, their first child, on June
25. The Me Donoughs have recently bought a
home at 640 Hillcrest Ave. in Westfield, N. J.
Dick is a partner in the firm McDonough, Mc
Donough and Sullivan in Plainfield.
To Ed and Barbara Everett, a second son,
Brooks Frederick, on June 5. Brother David is
now 2. Ed is a salesman for the Bassick Co.,
with a Northern Jersey territory.
1959
To W ilber P., J r . and E lizabeth D era son, W ilbur Presley, III, in Jack
sonville, Fla., on June 22. The Dershimers
are living at 1649 Lakewood Rd., Jacksonville.
shimer ,
Flashes
(Continued from page 29)
burgh, Pa. H e lives at 803 Cottonwood Dr.,
Monroeville, Pa.
J ohn G. Me G ucken has been granted the
Master of Science degree in Geology by Lehigh
University.
H einz P ichler has been granted the degree
of Doctor of Business Administration by the
Institute for W orld Trade in Vienna. His
mailing address is Thurn, Post St. Stefan i.
Lav., Karnten, Austria.
Robert H. P urple is English teacher and
coach in the Edmeston Central School this
year.
D onald S. B ezuyen
93 Elmwood Ave.
Hohokus, N . J.
Two members of the class were awarded the
Master of Arts degree in Teaching by Harvard
University in June. They are: W illiam M.
F riend and A lvin G ranowsky . William
has now enrolled in the New York University
Law School.
Leslie A ronow is a reporter for The Frank
lin-New Record in Middlebush, N. J., and lives
at 60 Amsterdam Ave., Passaic.
D aniel R. Leamy, J r . has been awarded a
research assistantship in the Department of
Botany at the University of Michigan for 195960.
J erome P. N esbit is working for KimberlyClark Corp. as a retail salesman.
1955
To Edward and Constance A rmstrong, a
son, Theodore Hastings, on June 9, to join sis
ter Wendy. A salesman for IBM in New
York, Ed lives at 70 Pinewood Gardens, Hartsdale.
To H arvey and P aula Y eager, their first
child, Wendy Ann, on June 22. Harvey is
interning at Hahnemann Medical College and
Hospital, Newark, N. J. They live at 1 Roseld
Ave., Deal.
R onald A. Stroth is a student at Cornell
University Medical College in New York.
Robert D. W ebster
325 W est End Ave.
New York, N. Y.
Information on activities and whereabouts of
the Class of 1959 is still so incomplete that it
will be held for a more complete report in the
December issue of the News.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
Completed
Careers
Cyrus A ldrich ’94
Word has reached the Alumni Office of the
death of the Rev. Cyrus Aldrich last February
3 after several years of poor health. He had
spent his life as a country preacher, the work
closest to his heart, and had continued his
interest in and love for Colgate. He was a
member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
He is survived by his wife, Laura, of
Richmondville; two sons, Henry ’17 of Hous
ton, Texas, and Ivan Cyrus of Jackson, Miss.,
and two daughters, Mrs. Ronald Linderman of
Marcellus and Mrs. Donald Drew of Buffalo.
Irving C. G alusha ’03
Irving Charles Galusha, Fulton newspaper
man for more than half a century, died in
Syracuse last May 20 after a long illness. He
had retired in 1951.
Born in W ilton, he received his early edu
cation in the Saratoga Schools. At Colgate he
was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity,
president of the senior class and vice-president
of the YMCA. i
After graduation he was employed by the
American Newspaper Association as a sales
man and a year later started his long news
paper career as Fulton correspondent for the
Syracuse Herald. He served several newspapers
before joining the staff of The Patriot in
Fulton, where for 30 years he was a member
of the advertising staff and wrote the popular
front-page column, "Bill Booster.” He was
active in Baptist church affairs and in Col
gate alumni activities, attending the 55th re
union of his class on campus in June, 1958.
Surviving are his wife, Helen, of 422 Cayuga
St., Fulton; two sons, four daughters and 11
grandchildren.
W . Edward H in m an ’04
W illis Edward Hinman died on June 29 at
the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Hicks of
15 E. Jefferson Rd., Pittsford, following a
heart attack.
W hile at Colgate he was a member of Beta
Theta Pi fraternity and in his senior year was
President of the Press Club and Business
Manager of the Madisonensis.
After graduation he taught school for sev
eral years before becoming interested in
engineering, when he secured a position with
the New York Transit Company and studied
evenings at the Brooklyn Polytechnic School.
He ultimately became Assistant Designer Engi
neer for the New York Central Railroad, a
position he held until his retirement in 1948.
FOR OCTOBER, 1959
He is survived by his wife, Frances, now
living in Rochester; three daughters and
seven grandchildren.
Ellis W . Leavenworth ’05
Ellis W . Leavenworth, 75, specialist in
trade-mark law, died on July 27, apparently of_
a heart attack, at his summer home at Wainscott, L. I. He was a partner in, and founder
of, the New York law firm of Watson, Leaven
worth, Kelton and Taggart.
Mr. Leavenworth came to Colgate from his
native village of Eaton. He was leader of the
Intercollegiate Debate Team, a member of the
Glee and Mandolin Clubs and of Phi Beta
Kappa and Delta Upsilon fraternity.
He received his law degree from Columbia
University, after which he began some fifty
years of practice in New York, during which
time he was instrumental in having such words
as "cellophane” and "cola” legally declared
generic terms instead of trade-mark names. He
was the author of a report, "Lost Monopolies
of Names and Things,” made to the American
Chemical Society, and a member of many
legal associations.
He is survived by his wife, Isabel, and two
sons, Thomas H. and Coman.
G eorge M. Y ork ’07
George Morell York, retired professor, died
July 26 in a Utica hospital after a brief illness.
He was 77.
At Colgate he was assistant manager of var
sity baseball in his junior year and manager
in his senior year, was a member of the Press
Club and of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. H e con
tinued his education at Clark University and
in 1916 joined the Albany State Teachers Col
lege faculty as an assistant professor of busi
ness. H e was chairman of the department at
the time of his retirement in 1947. He also
managed the Appalachin Mountain Club Camp
at Southwest Harbor, Maine, for 21 summers.
In 1947 he moved to Cazenovia, where he took
up teaching again, serving on the Cazenovia
Junior College faculty until 1957.
He is survived by his wife, Lou C .; a daugh
ter, Mrs. George W . Morris of Syracuse, and
a son, Oliver M. ’33 of Ithaca.
A lbert T. O’N eill ’09
Albert Thomas O ’Neill, president of the
Canadian Niagara Power Company, died at his
home in Tonawanda on August 23 after a brief
illness. He was 74.
After leaving Colgate, where he was a mem
ber of Phi Gamma Delta, he earned his law
degree at the Syracuse University School of
Law. He joined the claims and tax depart
ment of the Syracuse Lighting Company, pred
ecessor of Niagara Mohawk, later transferred
to the W estern Division of the Niagara Hud
son System as claims attorney and subsequently
became vice-president in charge of the Western
Division of Niagara Mohawk Power Corpora
tion. He retired from that office in 1955 but
continued as a director of the company and as
president and board chairman of the Canadian
Niagara Power Company.
He is survived by his wife, Helen; a daugh
ter and five sons. Two of his sons are John
F. ’42 of Poughkeepsie and Thomas J. ’43 of
New York City. His brother was the late
Frank "Buck” O ’Neill, former Colgate football
coach.
/ Carl W . Z iegler ’10
Carl W illiam Ziegler, former Associate Pro
fessor of Rhetoric and Public Speaking at Col
gate, died on May 7 in Scranton, Pa., after
a brief illness.
Mr. Ziegler was born in N orth Scranton and
received his early education at Scranton High
School. Upon graduation from Colgate, where
he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Delta
Kappa Epsilon fratermty, he jt>ined the faculty
of the Summit, N. J., High School and in 1912
became head of the English Department of the
Scranton Central High School. He resigned
this post to accept the appointment at Colgate
in 1920. In 1922 he returned to the Scranton
system to become Principal of the new N orth
Scranton Junior High School in 1924. In
1926 he became head of the Department of
Education at Lafayette College, where he re
mained until his retirement in 1944. He held
M. A. and Ph. D. degrees from Columbia
University, was the author of numerous articles
and edited a high school edition of Chaucer’s
Tales for a pocket classic series.
He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Charles N.
Ledyard of Clarks Summit, Pa., with whom
he resided, and a niece.
Frank W . T aft T3
W ord has reached the Alumni Office of the
death on Setember 27, 1958, of Frank W illiam
Taft in Clearwater, Fla., where he had engaged
in the real estate business since his retirement
as an attorney. At Colgate he was a member
of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. His widow,
Mrs. Villo L. Taft, now resides in Sidney.
James L. D oyle ’09
R obert Bowling ST4
W ord has been received in the Alumni
Office, without details, of the death last April
4 of James Lewis Doyle in Franklin, Ohio. He
had retired as Chief Engineer of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio in 1952.
The Rev. Robert Bowling, 74, Dean Emeri
tus of Judson College in Marion, Ala., since
his retirement in 1957, died on May 5 after
an illness of several weeks.
31
Born in Massie Mill, Va., Mr. Bowling had
received the A. B. degree from Richmond
College in Richmond, Va., before he entered
the Seminary, where he earned the B. D. and
M. A. in Theology degrees. He later took
summer work at both the University of V ir
ginia and the University of Chicago, receiving
the M. A. degree in Education from the
former in 1925.
He spent 13 years as Principal of high
schools in Virginia and in 1926 became Pro
fessor of Education and Registrar at Judson,
oldest Baptist college for women. In 1938
he became Acting Dean. Until his illness he
continued to keep his office open daily for
counsel to faculty and undergraduates. He was
an active member of the Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Noland, of 309
E. DeKalb St., Marion; a son, a daughter,
three granddaughters, two brothers and a
sister.
H enry H. D earing ’16
Henry Hinckley Dearing, vice-president of
the Cleveland (O hio) Trust Company in
charge of the personal loan and finance de
partment, died on August 4 in his home in
Shaker Heights. He was 65.
Born in Yokohama, Japan, the son of mis
sionary parents, he attended Colgate Academy
before entering the University. He was a
member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
The year he graduated he entered the
Foreign Service School of the National City
Bank of New York. He was first assigned to
the International Banking Corporation of Lon
don, later transferred to its Far Eastern office
in China.
In 1921 he joined the staff of the Merchants
National Bank of Los Angeles and later the
Credit Alliance of New York. He was an or
ganizer, a vice-president and a director of the
Credit Alliance of California and after it was
absorbed by the Commercial Credit Company
was regional director in New York and indus
trial sales manager in Baltimore. He became
associated with the Cleveland Trust in 1939Surviving are his wife, Estelle, of 19425
Van Aken Blvd., Shaker Heights, two sons and
six grandchildren.
Clarence I. H ungerford ’18
The Alumni Office was notified during the
summer of the death last June, in Los Angeles,
Calif., of Clarence I. Hungerford. He had been
living in Reseda, Calif.
Earl H. B arnes ’19
The Alumni Office has just received word
of the death last February 28 of Earl Herbert
Barnes of San Diego, Calif. He had been ill
for a short time following a heart attack. For
some years he had been a special agent for
the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Com
pany in San Diego.
Born in Hantsburg, Ohio, he prepared for
college at East High School, Cleveland, Ohio.
He was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity,
but left college in 1917 to enter the U. S.
engineers and ordinance corps.
Surviving are two sons and two daughters.
32
Carl C. Crippen ’19
W ord has come to the Alumni Office dur
ing the summer of the passing in December,
1956, of the Rev. Carl Clinton Crippen. He
had been pastor of the Methodist Episcopal
Church in Galeton, Pa.
W illard
L.
U nderwood
’2 3
W ord has been received, without further
details, of the death of W illard L. Underwood
last May 29. He had been with the Cuyahoga
Abstract Title and Trust Co., Cleveland, Ohio.
His son, Daniel H., is a member of the Class
of 1957.
G eorge
A.
Earl
’2 3
The Alumni Office received word during
the summer of the death, on June 17, of
George Albert Earl. His widow, Mrs. George
A. Earl, continues to live at 435 Magee Ave.,
Rochester.
C larence G. V ichert ’26
Clarence Gordon Vichert, former Baptist
missionary in W est China, died suddenly of a
heart attack on July 21 in Toronto, Ontario.
He had recently completed his thesis for his
masters degree in social work and was looking
forward to a new career in that field.
He is survived by his wife, Constance, and
three sons. His father, Dr. John F. Vichert,
was Dean of the Colgate Theological Seminary
1915-23.
J. W illiam Fin k , J r . ’27
John W illiam Fink, Jr., Orange County at
torney, died suddenly on September 8 in the
Henry Hudson Hotel in Central Valley. He
was 55.
Born in Boston, Mass., he attended New
burgh Free Academy, Rutgers Preparatory
School, and received his law degree from New
York University. At Colgate he was a mem
ber of Maroon Key and the Varsity "C” Club,
participated in class and varsity track and was
a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
For several years he was an editor of law
publications for the Frank Shepard Co. in
Colorado Springs, Colo., and since 1937 has
had a private law practice in Central Valley.
An active Democrat in Orange County politics,
he served for 15 years on the Executive Com
mittee of the Democratic party, headed the
"Harriman for Governor” committee and was
chairman of the Democratic committee of the
Town of Woodbury for several years.
He is survived by his father, Dr. J. W illiam
Fink of Newburgh; a brother and a son. His
step-son, Stephen M. Bull, III, is a member of
the Class of I960.
L awrence C. Cobb ’30
Lawrence Cameron Cobb, 55, managing
editor of the Butler, N. J., Argus, died at his
desk on August 6 while completing the final
edition of the weekly newspaper. He suffered
a heart attack.
Born in Lyndonville, Vermont, he received
his secondary education at Mt. Hermon School
before he entered Colgate. W hile on campus
he was Business Manager of the Banter, Presi
dent of the Christian Association and a mem
ber of Gorgon’s Head and Sigma N u frater
nity.
Before joining the staff of the Argus he
had been owner-publisher of The Tri-Town
W eekly in W est Brookfield, Mass.
Surviving are his wife, Isabelle, of Huron
Ave., Oakland, N. J., and two sons.
G ennaro F. Lignante ’30
Gennaro F. Lignante of Winchester, Va.,
died in a Yonkers hospital on September 12 as
a result of lung cancer. He was associated
with Agne Associates, fund raising organiza
tion in Washington, D. C.
Born in Pittsburgh, Pa., he received his
secondary education in the Mackenzie School,
Monroe. In college he was manager of both
varsity and freshman hockey, assistant manager
of varsity football and manager of freshman
football. A member of both junior and senior
honor societies, he belonged to Phi Kappa Psi
fraternity.
He resided in Westchester and New York
until six years ago when he moved to W in
chester, where he was active in community
affairs and a vestryman in the Episcopal
church.
He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth, and
two daughters, Genna 12, and Helen 10.
Edward
M.
Crosson ’33
W ord has reached the Alumni Office of the
death last March of Edward Marderos Cros
son. He had been manager of The Crosson
Corp. in Mountain View, N. J. His wife,
Virginia, and four children survive and reside
at 206 Pine St., Pompton Lakes, N. J.
James E. V a n N atta, Jr. ’34
W ord has recently reached the Alumni Of
fice of the death from a heart attack in August,
1958, of James Emery Van Natta, Jr. He had
been living at 166 Pleasant Grove Rd., Ithaca,
where his wife,, who survives him, still lives.
At Colgate he was a member of Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity.
W illiam J. R ule ’44
The Alumni Office has recently received
word that W illiam James Rule, III died of a
heart attack last January 15. A musician, he
had been living in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., where
his mother, Mrs. Helen Rule, who survives
him, resides at 3021 Alhambra St.
C harles F. Jo h n so n , Jr . H ’52
Charles Frederick Johnson, Jr., Chairman of
the Board and former President of the Endicott-Johnson Company, to whom Colgate award
ed the honorary LL.D. degree in 1952, died
on August 9 after a short illness.
COLGATE ALUMNI NEWS
COLGATE CALENDAR
OCTOBER
24
28
29
3 0 , 31, Nov. 1
31
NOVEMBER
4
6
7
12
13
14
16
17
21
22
25
26
28
DECEMBER
1
3
4
5
6
8
9
11
12
15
16
Alfred
Cross Country (V)
Home
Union
Soccer (V)
Schenectady
Alfred
Cross Country (F)
Home
Yale (Band goes)
Football (V)
New Haven, Conn.
Rochester
Soccer (F)
Rochester
Lecture: Dr. Charles N. Reilley
212 McGregory Hall
Outing Club Trip to Colgate Camp on Upper Saranac Lake
U of Connecticut
Soccer (V)
Home
Football (V)
Holy Cross
Worcester, Mass.
Dedication of new Sigma Chi House
Chapter House
Sigma Chi Dedication Banquet
Student Union
Cortland
Soccer (F)
Home
Fall House Party Weekend begins
Soccer (V)
Syracuse
Syracuse
Soccer (F)
Cornell
Ithaca
Football (F)
Cornell
Home
Football (V)
Bucknell
Home
All-College Party Dance
Huntington Gymnasium
Public Debate, sponsored by DAR at home of Mrs. Ernest Shovea, Oneida
(students participating)
Football (F)
Syracuse
Syracuse
Pep Rally and Bonfire on campus
Football (V)
Syracuse (Band goes)
Syracuse
Cross Country
N. Y. State High Schools
Home
Annual Class of 1884 Prize Debate (runner-up)
Lawrence Hall
Concert: Masterplayers ol: Lugano
Chapel
Careers Conference on Campus
Annual Class of 1884 Prize Debate (final)
Chapel
Thanksgiving Recess Begins
Football (V)
Brown
Providence, R. I.
Toronto, Canada
Glee Club: Tri-University Festival
(Toronto, Michigan State and Colgate)
Basketball (V)
Home
Siena
Student Union
Block C Dinner
Princeton
Hockey (V)
Princeton
Basketball (V)
Ithaca
Cornell
Hockey (V)
Army
West Point
Swimming (V)
Army
West Point
Ithaca
Basketball (F)
Cornell
Swimming (F)
West Point
Army
Home
Hockey (F)
Griffiss Air Base
Chapel
Christmas Concert, Colgate Glee Club
Student Union
Kingsford Public Speaking Contest
Swimming (V)
Home
Cornell
Ithaca
Wrestling (V)
Cornell
Swimming (F)
Home
Cornell
Ithaca
Wrestling (F)
Cornell
Student Union
Red Cross Blood Bank
Home
Hockey (V)
Cornell
Home
Swimming (V)
Williams
New York City
Basketball (V)
Columbia
Home
Swimming (V)
Lehigh
Home
Wrestling (V)
Penn State
Home
Swimming (F)
Syracuse
Home
Wrestling (F)
Syracuse
Home
Hockey (F)
Hamilton
Schenectady
Wrestling (V)
Union
Christmas Recess begins
Home
Hockey (V)
Hamilton
The Thirteen Christmas Tour begins (details in next issue)
Abbreviations’. ( V ) — Varsity; (F ) — Freshman
2:30
12:00
2:00
2:00
3:00
7:30
2:00
1:30
5:30
7:30
p. m.
Noon
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p.
p.
p.
p.
m.
m.
m.
m.
3:30 p. m.
3:00
4:15
2:00
1:30
9:00
2:00
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
1:30
7:15
1:30
11:00
7:00-9:00
8:30
p.
p.
p.
a.
p.
p.
m.
m.
m.
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m.
m.
7:30-8:30 p. m.
Noon
10:30 a. m.
8:00
7:00
8:00
8:15
2:00
2:00
6:15
2:30
8:30
7:30
4:30
8:00
3:30
6:30
10:00-4:00
8:00
3:30
8:00
2:30
2:00
3:30
2:00
2:00
3:30
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
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p. m.
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p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
p. m.
Noon
8:00 p. m.
From New York Life’s yearbook of successful insurance career men!
BOB BRAD LEY-for
10 years in succession
more than a
million dollars in sales!
New York Life representative Bob Bradley is on
a road that seems to have no ending. Every year
since 1949, he has sold more than a million dollars
worth of New York Life insurance and is well on
the way to doing the same this year. And because
of New York Life’s unique compensation plan,
Bob is assured of a lifetime of financial security.
Bob Bradley, like many other college alumni, is
well established as a New York Life representa
tive. His own talents and ambitions are the only
limitations on his potential income. In addition,
he has the deep satisfaction of helping others. If
you or someone you know would like more infor
mation on such a career with one of the world’s
leading insurance companies, write:
ROBERT c.
BRADLEY, C.L.U.
New York Life
Representative at
the Columbus, Ohio
General Office
m
m
m
U n iv e rs ity .
„ . s . Army ,4 1 _ , 4 6 _
]Vew York L ife
Insurance
Company
C o lle g e R e la tio n s, D ept. Q -22
Marlicnn A w m ifl Npw York 10 . N. Yj
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