In-Memory Masonic Temple, Sphinx Temple, and a past president of the Omar Shrine Club. He is survived by his wife, Mildred; his four children, Kathleen Ferguson-Tusa, of Cronton-onHudson, NY, Ronald W. Ferguson, of Jupiter, FL, Victoria Ferguson-Morgan, of Lebanon, CT, and Colleen Ferguson, of New Hartford, CT; and six grandchildren.
William Walter l=rost, Jr., 75, 1952 Dr. William W Frost, Jr., of Casa Grande, AZ, died on March 28, 2006. After graduating from Concord High School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1952. He subsequently received his medical degree from Vermont Medical School in 1956. He was a captain in the U.S. Air Force from 1959 to 1961. In 1961, he began his medical practice, Concord Pediatrics, in Concord, NH, where he was a lifelong resident until he retired to Arizona in 1994. He was president of the Concord Hospital Board of Directors and a county medical examiner. Robert l-4ooper Smith, 1952 R. Hooper Smith, 78, of Baltimore, MD, died on April 10, 2006, of complications from prostate cancer. After attending boarding school at Middlesex School in Concord, MA, he left in 1944 to join the U.S. Navy. From 1945 to 1947, he entered the Naval Reserve and served as a pharmacist's mate third class. He received his high school diploma in 1948 from the Gilman School in Baltimore. He attended Trinity with the Class of 1952. Before he began his investment career, he worked in the insurance industry and at the Society for the Blind in Baltimore. In 1957, he became an assistant trust officer with the Equitable Trust Bank in Baltimore, and subsequently worked for Gruntal & Co. In 1968, he joined WE. Hutton & Co. In 1977, he started at Fidelity Deposit Co., where he worked for 16 years as a bond portfolio manager. He retired in 1996. He was also a talented watercolorist, and studied at the Maryland Institute College of Art for a time in the 1950s. During retirement be took courses at the Mitchell School of Fine Arts in Baltimore. He is survived by his wife, Sita Kurkjian; his son, Harri Hooper Smith, of Baltimore; his two daughters, Lisa Smith Cox, of Angel Fire, NM, and ora Smith Baker, of Fairfield, PA; and five grandchildren. Everett Alden Tuttle, Jr., 1952 Dr. Everett A. Tuttle, of Nashua and Laconia, NH , died on June 19, 2006, at the age of 75 . After graduating from Central High School in Manchester, NH , he attended Trinity with the Class of 1952. He subsequently received his medical degree from Tufts University Medical School in 1956. He served as a U.S. Navy lieutenant at the Portsmouth (NH) Navy Hospital. For almost 40 years, he practiced pediatric medicine in southern New Hampshire, retiring in 1995. He was a founding member of Nashua
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Pediatrics. He sang in his parish's choir and was on the board of numerous organizations, including the Nashua Flycasters Association. He is survived by five daughters, Susan Wakefield, of Fairfax Station , VA, Diane Todis, of Nashua, Caroline Anstey, of Belmont, NH , Vivian, of Farmington, CT, and Cynthia Raymond , of Seabrook, NH; three sons, Everett, of Enfield, CT, Matthew, of Boston, MA, and Timothy of San Francisco, CA; and 10 grandchildren.
Bruno Anthony Chistolini, 1953 Bruno A. Chistolini, 75, ofWesrfield, MA, died on May 13,2006. After graduating from Westfield High School and a year at Monson Academy, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1953. At Trinity he played basketball and baseball, winning the most-valuable-player award in basketball. He was a senior purchasing agent at Hamilton Standard, retiring in 1991. He was a past president of St. Rocco's Men 's Club and the Caspano Club. He is survived by his wife, Lillian; his children, Christopher, ofWestfield, MA, Linda Crockett, of Southwick, MA, Mark, of Montreal, and Carol Dowling, of California; and nine grandchildren. Joseph Angelo Guardo, 1953 Joseph A. Guardo, 74, ofWestbrook, CT, died on June 24, 2006. After graduating from Bulkeley High School in Hartford, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1953. He subsequently attended Boston College School of Law for one year before starting his career in banking. He is survived by two sons, Joseph A. Guardo, Jr. , of New York, and Gian Guardo, of North Haven, CT; a daughter, Pan1ela Guardo, of London, England; and two granddaughters.
William Raymond Whitelaw, 1953 Dr. William R . Whitelaw, 7 4, of East Orleans, MA, died on April 8, 2006. After graduating from Teaneck High School in Teaneck, NJ, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1953. He subsequently received his medical degree from Albert Einstein College of Medicine ofYeshiva University in the Bronx, NY. He served in the U.S. Navy from 1953 to 1957 and became a qualified submarine officer, entitled to wear gold dolphins. In 1963, he began his a fanlliy medical practice out of his Orleans home and served as school physician for the Nauset Regional schools. He ran his practice for 30 years and delivered nearly 3,000 babies. He closed the practice in 1995. When asked about his hobbies in a Trinity alumni survey, he wrote, "playing banjo; making furniture Gunk); borrowing money; repairing toys." He leaves his wife, Marilyn, and his five children, William E, Todd, Arlyn, Ian, and Regan. !=rank 1-4olgate Boos, Ill, 1957 Frank H. Boos, Ill , 70, of Bloomfield Hills, MI , died of complications from vascular disease on May 9, 2006. After graduating from Detroit University School in Detroit, Ml, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1957. As the "bow-tied appraiser" of the PBS television program "Antiques Roadshow;路 he was an original member of the show's cast. During his tin1e with the program, he appraised thousands of antiques, mainly silver, as the show traveled to many American cities. For 37 year, he ran an auction, appraisal, and gallery business in Troy, Ml, handling the sale of some leading art collections over the years. He also had his own collection of several hundred bow ties. He is survived by his wife, Nancy; sons, Christopher and Jonathan; daughters, Alexandra Stephenson and Kristina Boos; and five grandchildren .
Lea Shippen Luquer, Jr., 1953 L. Luquer,Jr., ofCernusco, Italy, died on February
7, 2006, at the age of74. After graduating from the Darrow School in New Lebanon, NY, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1953, where he was a member of Delta Psi fraternity. He subsequently attended the American Institute for Foreign Trade in Phoenix, AZ , where he specialized in South America. He served in the U.S. Air Force in England for two years. During his international career, he worked in sales and management in France and Italy and an asset-based fmancial group in Italy. He was also chairman at World Asset Based Financial Association in Holland. He was president of the advisory board for the World Missionary Order in Rome. He leaves his wife, Giovannella; a son, Dominick; a daughter, Nathalie du Bot; and five grandchildren. He al o leaves a brother, Peter C. Luquer, Trinity Class of 1956, and a sister, Grace L. Madeira.
Myron Walter Drabowsky, 1957 Myron (Moe) W. Drabowsky, 70, of Sarasota, FL, died on June 10, 2006, of multiple myeloma, a form of cancer. He was born in Ozanna, Poland, and came to the United States with his family as a child. After graduating from Loomis Chaffee School in Windsor, CT, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1957, where he was a member of the Student Council, the Atllletic Council, Newman Club, the basketball team, Alpha Chi Rho, and a standout member of the varsity baseball team. In the sunm1er of 1956, Drabowsky signed with the Chicago Cubs as a right-handed pitcher. Over the course of his baseball career from 1956 to 1972, he was remembered not only for his pitching abilities but for his light-hearted pranks. He played for eight teams, finishing with the White Sox, and is perhaps best known for his performance in the 1966 World Series opener as a member of the Baltimore Orioles. He finished off his baseball career with an 88-105 ERA and 55 saves. In his obituary in the New York Times, his prac-