Winter2005

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Alumni Fund Goal: $95,000 Class Secretary: Daniel M. Roswig, M .D., 3 Stonepost, Simsbury, CT 06070-2511 e-mail: daniel.roswig.1973@trincoll.edu; fax: 860-651 - 0895 Class Agents: Patti Mantell-Broad; Paul B. Zolan, Esq.

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Alumni Fund Goal: $150,000 Class Secretary: M atthew E. Moloshok, Esq., 1006 Prospect St., Westfield, NJ 07090-4221 e-mail: matthew.moloshok.197 4@trincoll.edu; fax: 973-621-7 406

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Alumni Fund Goal: $225,000 Class Secretary: Jameson French, 45 Driftwood Ln., Portsmouth, NH 03801-5204 e-mail: jameson.french.1975@trincoll.edu Class Secretary: Steve Hirsch, 11 Ricky Beth Ln., Old Greenwich, CT 06870 e-mail: steven.hirsch.1975@trincoll.edu Class Agent: H enry E. Bruce, Jr. Marlene K. Connor is the proud mother of two great boys, Maxwell (Maxi), who is seven, and Reginald (Reggie), who is nine. She is still a literary agent and has represented best-selling author Dr. Ronn Elmore as well as Essence Magazine and the Simplicity Pattern Company. Though always thinking of returning to New York, she lives in the suburbs of Minneapolis. What really nude her decide to write in, though, is she's just heard that Broadway Books will be publishing her third book, entitled WELCOME TO THE FAMILY: Memories of the Past for a Bright Future Together. Look fo r it next year! Kerry O'Keefe is living in Northampton, MA, with partner, musician John Coster (anyone remember Jacob's Reunion?) and raising her two children, Grace and Gus Canzano, ages 13 and 11 , respectively. She works for the Five College Center for the Study ofWorld Languages and is finishing her first manuscript of poems, entitled, FROM A BURNING BUILDING. She is pleased to report that both children are rabid Democrats, and that this summer the entire family attended the Warped Tour. Chris Mooney writes the following as we approach our 30th Reunion: "With a heavy heart after seeing good friends and colleagues murdered on 9/ 11 / 01, I examined life a bit and decided to retire from a leadership role at Mercer Human Resources Consulting at the end of2002. It had been a great run, in a fine company, but the consulting game is an endurance grind in a tough economy. Given the poorly managed events and shareholder value debacle in the Marsh McLennan Companies since then, my tinting was good. I did not know this corporate meltdown of ethics was coming at the time. "I took a master's in teaching degree during my self-scheduled sabbatical, but after a year away from the pace of consulting, the game beckoned one more time, so 2004 finds me back on airplanes with

Fidelity Consulting Group, part of the Fidelity Investments family. It is a great fmn, with patience and long-term focus . The job has required a shift in allegiance from Bronx Bombers to BoSox. I am getting to do what I have enjoyed most late in my career: solving complex problems where possible, developing young people for the future and preparing them for leadership. It's all good. "Part of my joy in life is seeing my daughter, Elizabeth, grow and take advantage of the opportunities at Trinity. She will graduate in 2006, and as of junior fall, Trin has been a great place for her to contribute her energies. As I write, our younger child, Brendan, is writing college applications, and it appears he'll end up somewhere in the NESCAC, so perhaps his sister will get to root for him when his soccer team plays atTrin. "Like many 50 somethings, I am wondering about the next several decades, if I get the gift of being here, and where the interesting places to go and things to do will be. I've kept up my frequent visits to Wyoming's western edge. 2003 included backpacking in New Zealand and beach in Ausrralia, and my next hegira will perhaps be to Alaska or South America. I seem drawn to mountains and wild places. Thus, living on the edge of NYC, which seems more now to be a good place to visit than to reside once one exits ' the work velocity zone', may change. I will ntiss New York's edginess if I leave, I am sure. " I send best wishes and kind thoughts to all classmates, and imagine that as a number of us find time again for things other than work and family, we'll all reach out more ofi:en to the good fr iends we made in the early 1970s. Regards."

Alumni Fund Goal: $180,000 Class Secretary: Elaine Feldman Patterson, 824 S. Ridgeley Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90036-4727 e-mail: elaine.patterson.1976@trincoll.edu; fax: 714-985-6350 Class Agents: John P. Clifford, Jr.; Harold A. Smullen, Jr. Thanks to Hobie Porter for sending a note to me last month. Hobie is back in the "for profit" world afi:er 14 years at the Haverford School. He is now the vice president and business development manager for The Glenmede Trust Company, an independent trust formed in 1956 by the heirs ofJoseph N. Pew (fo under of Sun Oil) to manage assets for the Pew Charitable Trusts. Hobie claims that he still gets out for tennis and squash, not to mention being a spectator at all three of his children's events. About his family, Hobie wrote, "Our son Andrew is traveling, working, and studying language in China for a year before starting at University of Pittsburgh in September 2005 . Daughters Molly and Becky are in 11th and 9th grades at Agnes Irwin School and my wife Pam now works for Right Management. Her own consulting firm, Stepping Stone Partners, served Right as a consultant for several years before she joined them in a full time role." Hobie also reported keeping up with Charlie Stewart, Jim Solomon, Greer Candler, Carol Weir, and Sam and Kathrine Corliss.

Looking to connect with a classmate and have lost their e-mail, phone number, or address? Register for the Trinity Alumni Online Community, which offers a password-protected alumni directory. In order to register, go to www. trincoll.edufpub/alumni, where you'll find the link to the community.

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