ROBIN M. BURNS ’66

ROBIN M. BURNS, 70, an architect in New York City, died Feb. 5, 2015. A member of Kappa Nu Kappa, he received his degree cum laude and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving his master’s degree from the Columbia University School of Architecture, he worked for New York City agencies for four decades to improve the design of public buildings. Among those who survive are his wife, Rena Grossfield, his daughter, two grandchildren, and his brother.

Rena writes, “Robin graduated from Columbia School of Architecture and spent most of his career working for various agencies in the City of New York, including City Planning, the Office of Downtown Brooklyn Development, the Department of General Services and the Department of Design and Construction (DDC). He served as chief architect of the Parks Department, overseeing the buildings in the city’s 200-plus parks. In the mid-’80s, he left public service to head the real estate development arm of the South Street Seaport Museum, at the time when the Rouse Corporation was transforming the Seaport area into one of its “festival marketplaces” akin to its projects in Boston and Baltimore. In his final years back with the city at DDC, he was senior project manager for the new multi-building police academy going up in Queens and the city’s new backup 911 emergency call center.

“Besides me, Robin left behind his daughter Jenny Burns and her husband, Geoff Sanoff, our two grandsons, Alexei (8) and Jesse (6), his brother Bruce, and his former wife and our dear friend Judy Burns and her wife Pat Magnuson. As I wrote in The New York Times obituary, he was a good man, taken too soon. Donations may be made to Learning Ally, where Robin was a longtime volunteer reader, 545 5th Avenue, NY, NY 10017; or to support Dr. Eileen O’Reilly’s pancreatic cancer research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering: mskcc.convio.net/goto/Robin_Burns.” Rena may be reached at rgrossfield at gmail.com.

MICHAEL E. TIMM ’64

MICHAEL E. TIMM, 72, an attorney and former assistant New York State attorney general, died Mar. 15, 2015. He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and received his law degree from New York University Law School. He practiced law in private practice and as an assistant attorney general. In 1995, he and his wife opened the Bijou Galleries, an antiques and collectibles shop in Cold Spring, N.Y. Survivors include his wife, Jane Silver Timm, his son, and his granddaughter.

EDWARD McGREW JR. ’59

EDWARD McGREW JR., a retired business manager, died May 31, 2015, at age 78. A member of Alpha Delta Phi, his career as a business manager took him from the Chicago Board of Trade to the International College of Surgeons. He later worked for H&R Block in their premium division and enjoyed teaching tax preparation to their new students. His wife, Carol William McGrew, survives, as do three daughters, eight grandchildren, and his sister.

JIM R. BROWNING, M.D. ’59

JIM R. BROWNING, M.D., an ophthalmologist and well-known gardener, died Mar. 12, 2015. He was 77. A member of Eclectic, he received his medical degree from Jefferson Medical College and served in the U.S. Navy. He practiced ophthalmology for 44 years. A renowned gardener of rhododendron, azaleas, magnolias, and dwarf conifers, he was also a hybridizer of hardy rhododendron and a dedicated member of the Great Lakes Chapter of the American Rhododendron Society, which awarded him the Bronze Medal, their highest honor. Among those who survive are his wife, Blanche Rider Browning, two children, two grandchildren, and his brother.

EUGENE V. ALESSANDRONI II ’58

EUGENE V. ALESSANDRONI II, a career prosecutor in the Philadelphia district attorney’s office, died Nov. 25, 2014, at age 77. He was a member of Sigma Chi and received his law degree from Villanova University. During his 38-year career in the district attorney’s office, serving under five district attorneys, he had, at various times, headed the child support division and the anti-obscenity enforcement division. He had also been a public defender and an assistant counsel to former governor Raymond P. Shafer. His wife, Maria Lochetto Alessandroni, and his brother survive.

WARREN WITHERELL ’56

WARREN WITHERELL, 79, a former headmaster and the founder of Burke Mountain Academy, died May 26, 2014. He was a member of Alpha Chi Rho. After serving as an administrator in several independent schools, he founded Burke Mountain Academy in 1971, where he served as headmaster, English teacher and coach. He promoted the ability of student athletes to thrive and learn in a non-graded and physically active school. Through his coaching, more than 115 students and alumni of the school have been named to the U.S. Ski Team, and 43 to Olympic teams. In 2004 he came out of retirement to become headmaster of Crested Butte Academy, from which several top athletes moved on to the U.S. Ski and Snowboard teams. He wrote How the Racers Ski and co-authored The Athletic Skier and Lessons from Burke—One School That Works. He was inducted into two athletic halls of fame for both snow skiing and waterskiing. He set multiple world records in water skiing, including five world water skiing titles. Survivors include two daughters, two sisters, his brother, and a large extended family.

THOMAS H. CONNELL ’56

THOMAS H. CONNELL, a retired attorney and an artist, died Feb. 17, 2015, at age 80. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi and received his law degree from the University of Connecticut after serving in the U.S. Navy. As an attorney, he specialized in heavy construction and was president of the Connecticut law firm Michelson, Kane, Royster & Barger. After retirement he devoted much of his time to artwork. Many of his works feature Cope Cod and the Wellfleet Bay Sanctuary of the Massachusetts Audubon Society, where he was also a volunteer naturalist. Two children and four grandchildren survive.

CHARLES E. LITTLE ’55

CHARLES E. LITTLE, 83, a conservationist, author, and land use expert, died June 20, 2014. A member of Beta Theta Pi, he received his degree with distinction in creative writing. He was the great-grandson of Gaybert Barnes of the class of 1869, the grandson of C.E. Little of the class of 1894, and the son of John R. Little of the class of 1926. During the Korean War he served in the U.S. Army. He was an advertising executive at Foote, Cone, and Belding until 1963, when he became chief executive officer of The Open Space Institute and published its Open Space magazine with the objective of preserving areas of natural beauty in the New York metropolitan region. His entire life’s work then became devoted to the appreciation and protection of American landscapes, rural or urban, public or private. In 1972 he joined the Conservation Foundation in Washington, D.C., and then became head of the Natural Resources Division of The Congressional Research Service, which he left in 1978 to establish the American Land Resource Association and edit its publication, American Land Forum. The author of many books, he founded Voices from the American Land, a quarterly publication of poetry celebrating outstanding landscapes of North America. Survivors include his wife, Ila Dawson Little, three children of his first wife, two stepsons, 12 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

ARTHUR A. COPPOTELLI ’55

ARTHUR A. COPPOTELLI ’55, a former instructor at Wesleyan, and a freelance writer, teacher and translator, died Mar. 5, 2015. He was 81. A member of Alpha Chi Rho, he received his degree with honors. He served in the U.S. Army and then received a master’s degree from Yale University in English Language and Literature. From 1968 through 1980 he lived in Italy, where he taught English literature and cinema for programs sponsored by Wesleyan, Trinity College, and Temple University, including the College of Letters at Wesleyan. He wrote dialogue and collaborated on numerous American-Italian movies, including on the movies Medea and Magdalen with Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini. He was the European fiction editor for Playboy magazine, translated the poems and books of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, and translated Landscape Painting in the 19thCentury for the New York Graphic Society. During the course of his career, he was a speechwriter for President John F. Kennedy, where he authored the proposal for the youth training corps used in President Kennedy’s State of the Union address. He was also an instructor of English and humanities at Wesleyan from 1965 to 1968, where he founded the Italian program. He served as European editor for Hawthorn Books, overseeing a major dictionary and encyclopedia project for Lateran University, and held numerous editorial and writing positions with the Architecture Research Institute and Hacker Art Books. Survivors include his great-grandnephew, Alex Coppotelli. His partner, Joan Dunlop, died in 2012.

ROBERT S. ROSSON, M.D. ’54

ROBERT S. ROSSON, M.D., a gastroenterologist at Hartford Hospital for 40 years, died May 8, 2015, at age 83. A member of Sigma Nu, he received his degree with honors and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. After receiving his medical degree from Harvard University, he continued his training in Boston and then in the U.S. Air Force before completing residencies and fellowships at Yale University and Hartford Hospital. He served as chief of gastroenterology at Hartford Hospital for 20 years and as president of the medical staff. He also served as a clinical professor of medicine at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine and as president of the Howard Spiro Society. He was predeceased by his wife, Eileen Kaufman Rosson. Among those who survive are three children, five grandchildren, his sister, and his partner, Judith Pitt.