?rv*ningtheproxniliv-TTW:ien?01neeThere’ll be more time for;chess and more time to study j(Chinese after Dr. Orrin Frink.Jr. and his wife, Dr. Aline H. ials | Frink, retire as professors of by j mathematics at the Pennsyl bip yania State University.He has been teaching for 4(1 years: she has been teaching at J * Penn State for 30 years.Rated an “expert” by the U.S. Chess Federation. Frinkserved 10 years as adviser to j P the Penn State chess club and [ he always has a game set up in be his study, frequently stopping to v n make a move as lie passes by.P Mrs. Frink, always interested “Min languages, has turned to Chinese with the hope she will ultimately he able to translate mathematical articles fromthery,toChinese to English. Some years!?’|ago shp studied Russian and translated from the Russian the, “Lectures on Calculus ofoVariations'1 by N. 1. Aktiiczer] for publication in this country in1961. jBoih Mr. and Mrs. Frink plan ; to continue their interests in1mathematics, too.“It was the one subject that has led to the few family argu ments wo have had over t h e years.” she explainsFollowing a trio to England and to I r e 1 a n d. where thev lived in 1960-61 and in 1965 66while he was a Fulbright fellow i at the University College. Dub 1 1 in, the couple will settle in j Kennebunkport. Me , living in a house that has been in Mrs. Frink’s family since 1747.