TRINITY COLl E. GE L•8R~RY ' 1 I ( ' l IV\ 1 l , tt

Volum- e XLVII HARTFORD, CONN., JANUARY II, 1950 Number I I

Junior Prom will be Held on Weekend Gladys Babson l-lannaford to Give Lecture Of Febru ary 17 at the Hartford Club Th d b t u Th R f o· d " The weekend of the 17th of Feb- T . . L' d. urs ay a ou e omance 0 Iamon s ruary is the date for the Junior Prom. rlnlty ISte In Book Lecture First of The dance will be held in the Hartford 'One Out of El'ghteon ' Club from 9 to 1 in the morning. The '-1 There will be a Yery important Attention all seniors! There New Series Junior Prom Committee, already plan­ Hartford, Conn., Dec. 28-Trinity meeting of the Sophomore Dining will be an important meeting of Gladys Babson Hannaford, noted College is listed among eighteen Jib- Club tomorrow at 1 o'clock in Cook the Senior lass held for the pur- lecturer on the lore and history of ning for a big week-end, announced era! arts colleges for men who have Lounge. All members of the club pose of discussing the clas gift to diamonds, will present a lecture on that they are sponsoring a contest to made "a remarkable contribution to are expected to attend inasmuch as the school, in the hemistry Audi- "The Romance of Diamonds" in the decide a theme for the dance. The the development of our national great- the election of new officers will be torium on Thursday, January 12, resumption of the Trinity College Lee- prize that they offer is a ticket and ness," in a new publication, "One Out held. John W. oote. ecretary. at 1:00 p.m. ture Series. The lecture will be given of Eighteen," issued by Westminster on January 12 in the ollege Audito- a corsage. They have received many College of Fulton, Missouri. rium at 8:15 p.m. and will be open to answers, but express the hope that In a survey of 18 liberal arts col- the public. the student body wil! continue to sub- leges for men founded by Protestant Mrs. Hannaford will tell of the mit their ideas as soon as possible as churchmen, Westminster found that A Scholar's Creative Best . . . romantic stages that a ctiamond passes the contest closes Jan. 20. "the number of eminent leaders in through from its extraction from the government, business, the professions Ed ote. : The following review ap- work of this sort, with invaluable cor- earth until it clima-xes its own romance As for the week-end many ~ctivities and arts graduated from these col- peared in last Sunday's Courant, and rections and addition , including the by making the romance of two young are planned. Friday night will see leges is way out of proportion to their is reprinted by the Tripod with the first unmangled and unexpurgated text persons more binding. Mrs. Hanna­ the Prom itself with Ray Stone and size," and "an eloquent commendation permission of Professor Hood. Mr. of the projected preface to the trans- ford will have screen pictures taken his orchestra supplying the dance of the liberal arts tradition in Amer- Notopoulos has long been recognized lation of the "Symposium," entitled during a season's visit to the South ican education." as one of the top scholars at Trinity, "A Discourse on the Manners of the African diamond mines. These pic- music and the Pipes donating the Westminster also discovered that and his recently published book serves Antient Gr eks Relative to the Subj ct tures depict the entire history of the intermission amusement. Saturday "nowhere does the educational dollar admirably to enhance his and our rep- of Love," but by virtue also of the diamond from the time it is blasted many athletic contests will be held on go so far as in the privately supported utation. actual first appearance in it of several out of a "pipe mine" until it takes college. The total endowment income pieces of Shelley's prose and verse. part in that bless d institution called the hill top. Freshman Basketball THE PLATO ISM OF SHELLEY: A team will face Trinity School in the of independent colleges is scarcely as STUDY OF PLATO ISM A D But the book as a whole is far marriage. much as the state appropriations of greater than this most welcome part Mrs. Hannaford >vill bring an ex­ evening and the Varsity Basketball THE POETIC MI TD-By James four of our great state universities. of it. The publi her's circular thus hibit containing replica of the Koh-i­ Team will fight it out with Bowdoin Yet with about $70 million a year A. otopoulos; Duke University s t a t es 1't s purposes: "It attempts to noor, the Hope and other historic . Press, Durham, N. C.; $7.50. h h PI t · th t t' 1 Co 11 ege. Th e re t o f th e sport s WI 11 income, our independent colleges s ow ow a omsm, e mos poe aca stones. Mrs. Hannaford will also ex­ have away games that will ali take educate well over a million students By Thurman L. Hood of all philosophies, gives substance to pound on the heroism and tragedy This book will stand as one of the Shelley's imagination and thought. It connected with lhe various stones. place in the afternoon. J n t~e evening in comparison to about J 25,000 in four la1·ge state universities-ten time as taller monuments of scholarship. tries to illuminate the complex nature Most famous of these are the curses the will have an open many students with the same amount Shelleyans, Platonists, students, all and meaning of Platonism, how it of the Hope diamond. house. of money-and at no cost to the tax­ booklovers of every sort, will find it works, hapes thought, and is trans­ Mrs. Hannaford has lectured at The committee for the dance are payer!" golden. Collectors, for instance (tho e muted to poetry in the alchemy of the mith, Wellesley, Vas:ar, ew York Bill Vananen, president, and the rep­ Listed with Trinity and Wesleyan crows and pack-rats of the world of creative mind. This involves the ad­ University, Syracus , orne11, Wash­ re entative from Alpha Delta Phi; were Amherst, Bowdoin, Colgate, books), will find in its Part III a first venture of great ideas moving fr e­ ington niversity, tephens College, Ned Gulp, vice-president; King How­ Davidson, Franklin and Marshall, edition of Shelley's translations from ly across the fields of knowledge." Leland tanford, University of South­ ard, secretary-treasurer; Bill Fritz, Hamilton, Hampden-Sydney, Haver­ Plato-first not only by virtue of its "This study therefore," the circular ern alifornia, and a long list of representing Sigma u; Bil! Irons of ford, Hobart, Kenyon, Muhlenberg, assembling and presenting in accurate continues, "is a symposium in which others. ; Jim Holladay Wabash, Washington and Jefferson, sequence the more than two hundred the classicist, the philosopher, the of Delta P i; John Friday of Psi Ep­ Westminster, Williams, and Wofford. pages of Shelley' hitherto scattered (Continued on page 2.) silon; Irving Hamilton of Tau Alpha; Jesters Tryouts Ray Lang of the Commons Club; Craig Ludlow of Delta Phi; Lew For Next Play Soon Raden of Theta Xi and chairman of The Jesters have announced they Half . .. will hold tryouts for their next pro­ the decorations committee; Dave Blair Glimpses of the First of ; and Brian Dorman Like many another solid American instructors, 5 lecturers, and a librarian relationship between the students and duction on the 6th and 7th of Febru­ ary. The tryouts will be held in Sea­ representing the neutrals and chair­ institution, Trinity College can look and doctor. chapel credits. Under military law, man of the music committee. over her shoulder and be satisfied with At the seventy-fourth commence­ attendance was not required, yet the bury 12 under Professor Vogel, fac­ her progress over the first half of the ment President Smith told the assem­ bulk of the Battalion was composed ulty director of the group. Twentieth Century. bled that on his recent trip to Eng- of matriculated students who were The play, "A Bell for Adano" by Already a going concern in 1900, it land, Trinity was considered to be the obligated by rule of the school to at­ John Hersey, will be given on two Military Ball Held was still, in the words of Franklin, "a strongest church college in the United tend chapel regularly. The President's successive weekends during the latter modest temple of wisdom." Twenty States by educators and laymen alike. report devoted a lengthy page or two part of March. There will be parts At the Bond Hotel or so years before, it commanded a o wonder, for Trinity' campus then to the problem. The end of the war for twenty-seven men and four women. closer view of Hartford proper on the crawled with men preparing for the saw most of the student body in a Neal Edg·:.tr, Pre ident of the Jesters, Seen . Great Success site of the present state capitol, but ministry. ot a church college, Trin­ state of lowered morale because of expressed his desire to see as many as early as '78, it was obvious that ity was nevertheless ''established by their not having been able to serve in men as pos ible try out for the parts. Trinity's first annual Military Ball Trinity (then Washington College) Episcopalians and administered in the "great adventure" as Luther called The play \viii be given in Alumni sponsored by the Air ROTC was held would need room if its great expecta- sympathy with their tenets ... in the it. Morning saw many lined up in Hall in the same Arena style which at the Bond Hotel Ballroom on Decem­ tions were to be realized. breadth with which its advantages are front of the infirmary pleading severe proved to be a great success at the ber 17. The music was provided by Since the turn of the century, Trin- placed at the service of every creed, cases of influenza-the disease of the last presentation. Pat Byrd and his Club Royale Or­ ity has come far. The newest building it is entitled to be called non-sec­ time. "How many had it and how chestra from 9 to 1 and the Trinity many didn't, we'll never know I guess, Pipes were on hand to render some on campus was the now ancient Board- tarian." man Hall built to house the natural 1914 was a big year for the muni­ but you couldn't always tell," says the Swimmers Crush B. entertaining numbers at intermission. U. history museum previously occupying tions makers a~d for Trinity. J . P. President in his message to the trus­ The feature of the evening was the Seabury Hall. Roomy and "plentifully Morg~n, long time trustee and heav_Y tees and college. One gets the feeling M.I.T. to Give Fight crowning of the queen of the Ball, windowed," it also allowed expansion I contnbutor, do~ate~ funds for a h- that there wasn't a raging epidemic. Mrs. Joseph Rekas, who recently ap­ Frosh Look Powerful . 1 g and allied science de- brary to be bmlt 111 the name of a President Luther died in 1928, and peared as cover girl on Life Magazine. f th b 10 0 o e Y their laboratories friend named W'll'1 Jams. L a t er M or- Remson Ogilby took the helm of a Swimming goes into high gear for The judges were as follows: Mr. part men t s a nd · , · d f · There were no elm trees lining the gan s son contnbuted fun s or maJ~- ship under full sail. They were pros­ the next two weeks here at Trinity. Mitchel! Pappas Mr. Gu tave And­ bank of main buildir.gs but there was tenance and growth. By now the h­ perous years, the late twenties. The In their fir·st contest ag-ainst Boston rian, and orris Hamilton. Captai~ a string of telephone poles running brary had reached 0,000 volumes and new president was glad to report that niversity, the Mermen won 5 -17, Opinions voiced by committee mem­ parallel to the building and halfway 45,000 pamphlets. J. P. Morga~ once investments of the college were earn­ completely crushing their weaker bers and participants indicate that the wn The library sent the college $5,000 by m1stake, ing an average interest of 5.18 '7(- . The adversary and displaying brilliant dance was not only v<>ry successful, out on th e pres e n t la · . · ·t · f ncy comprising 40 000 but cheerfully let us keep 1t. Trit>od was editorializing on much the form. The varsity will swim in their but one of the be t held by Trinity was 111 1 s m a ' mphlets ' It Entry mto· World War I saw f amous same topics as today although the second meet of the season against a volumes an d a I o t of Pa · · h in recent years. · t' th meagerest rations Flavel Luther as President. T e war style was more vigorous and the opin­ strong M.I.T. squad on January 11. 1 1 0 11 The ROTC will continue to sponsor was .~ s ~g . en! a hundred and saw the innovation of the S.A.T.C. ion more positive. Advertising was The varsity has not had much luck in similar Military Balls at Trinity so possJd ell a owmdgfif? tyy cents for addi- (Student Army Training Corps) in not as smooth and subtle, and a Mr. previous meets with the Engineers, two o ars an . 0 T. · 't that this annual dance may become a . . · th academic year wh1ch 172 men out of 21 from 11m y Descombe was letting us know thai having lost 57-18 and 50-25 in recent t10ns anc1 ca1 e m e 1 d fi tradition on the hill. ROT members of when Cornell was spending trained. Men who were dec are t he would fly anyone, any place, any­ campaigns. 190o hope that in the future that even more $ , and Columbia $26,000. only for special service were pressed time in his new 5-place biplane with a The Mermen have a good squad 23 000 tudcnts not affiliated with the ROTC What Trinity offered, it served well, into the corps, as well as fellows under Wright Whirlwind radial engine. with such standouts as Johnny Grill, Will participate in this social function. ut the menu was brief in 1900. There 1 who wished to volunte~r. This Slossberg was having reduction sales captain, Phil Costa, Tim Cutting, free Patrons and Patronesses were as b · extra-Trinity group plus the regular then too. style experts, Fred Kirschner and were four courses of instructiOn open follows: President and Mrs. Funston, the candidates for a degree: Arts, students formed a battalion which had The administration of Ogilby was a George Brewer, breast stroke marvels, Dean and Mrs. Hughes, Dean and to d about a month's existence before an memorable one. We gained Cook, Jim Huck, graceful perfectionist of etters and Science, Scien. ce, . an Mrs. Clarke, Dean Holland, Major L order was issued by the war depart- Goodwin, and Woodward dormitories, the springboard, and many other tters. In 1901, the course Jl1 scJe~ce William Taylor, Major and Mrs. John Le ment disbanding the unit. One of the the chemistry building, and, of course, prom1smg men. The team has been was extended to cover four years ~n- Folan, Capt. and Mrs. orris Hamil­ stead of the usual three. The daet pressing problems of the moment was the chapel-the President's delight greatly aided by the addition of sev- ton, anct Cadet Col. and Mrs. Seymour was served up by 13 professors, 6 the President's dilemma about the and joy. (Continued on page 2.) (Continued on pege 3.) Page. Ja nua ry 1 1, 1950 Page Two THE TRINITY TRIPOD The Reviewer ~bt ~t ' ~tipob By Ray Bernie Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. A lot of announcements and "throw away " have Member come to our de k over the v_acation, orne of which are Associated Collegiate Press out of date, and uninterestmg. Howe~e1, one of the most surprising and satisfying bits of mformation for Published weekly t hroughout the ncndemic year by the STU­ was the notice from John Mason that there i an DENTS Of' TRINITY COLLEGE. Subscription $3.00 1wr year. who write , which isn't strange in itself, but Student subscription included in tuition ftc. Entered at Ilartforcl, ~~umnus Conn., ns second clnss matter F hrunry 14. 1947, uncl•r th" Act of this one write about the Blues and Jazz. We believed Mnrch 3, I 79. The column of THE TRINITY fHIPOD are ~t all times open to alumni. underg raduates, and others for the duu:ua­ that the only relation Trinity had to Jazz-so uncia si­ aion of matters of int.erest to Trinity men. ca! and ungenealogical a subject-was through that fhm small band of students called here the "Ransom­ EXEC TIVE DOARD ites" for Jack of a better name. But, the contrary is Editor-in-Chief...... , ...... Peter V•ln Metre Business .Mnna«(' r ...... John MrGnw true either because of or perhaps in spite of his stay Mnnnging Editoc ...... John Coot~ at T~inity. Mr. Edward Abbe riles, '16, Rhodes Scholar Members-at-Largo ...... •. .•...... Robert II Prb~rt 1''. Scott nillyou and member of the distinguished law firm, . alwalder Wickersham and Taft ha written an hi torical and critical text to A Trea ury of t he Blue , edited by the Glimpses of th e First Half venerable W. C. Handy. The Treasury is a completed ( ontinu d from pagl' 1.) revised edition of the earlier (1926) Blues-An Anthol­ The Dec., 'l editorial proved prophetic: we were ogy, al 0 \\Titten by Niles. His foundat i ~n and_ author­ again at war with Germany, and also .Japan and Italy. ity is to be found in his record as mu IC revtewer in People began to drift out of th ~chool to enli~t with various magazines, the Independent, the New Re pu blic, the allies ot· our own services. The handwriting was the ation, and Pulitzer'· famous newspa per, the World . on the wall and every student read it without hiR text­ Sigmund Spaeth reviewed the Treasury in the Herald books. All out war brought the air-mid warning Tribune, December 11, 1949 saying, "Mr. iles ha long system to th <·hapel towe1· where it was mann<'d day been kno\vn as an expert on the ubject, c:nd his knowl­ and night; rooms were s t aside for shC'lters, frat r­ edge has clearly ripened in the last twenty years, par­ nities began to close, the draft bll'\\' harder and thl'n ticularly as his experience included the development of the \' -12 unit arrived on a n<'arly vacant eampus. The jazz (both weet and hot), wing and th ·~ latest distor­ Tripod be~an t carry stories of the exploits of Trinit~ 1 tions of be-bop . .. His pronouncements may be con ­ men in the eomers of the wol'id. And it ht>gan to J'U il 1[1 ~ sidered as authoritative." Perhaps thene's more body the obituaries of those men. Thp JWnce came and tht> to "alumni pit·it" than we thought. school returned to normal and Jll' pi laughed about the Reprmred from January 1950 iuue of E,quire Copyr1ght 1950 by Esquire , In'- * * busine:!\ of sitting in the ehapel tower. Trinit~ · gained * n new president; an able otw and a friPJHlly one, well ­ The Bushnell l\Iemorial has some interesting things scheduled for January: ! iked and admired. Some of the g-ood thing·s h has " Did you ring, Sir?" done cnn be pointed out to JHircnts on a tour, the oth rs January 11 and 14: J ohn Jay presents his film, "Alps can on ly be felt. to the Andes." January 15: Horace Heidt presents his Philip Nlorris Associated Collegiate Press . .. program, "The Kids Break Thru." A Scholar's Creative Best . January 1 : The bad boy of the organ wno does things ( ontinucd from page 1.) to Bach which Bing Crosby wouldn't think of doing, hi torian of idea!\, and th litl'rary trit.ic arc invit d to niversity of Texas coeds ought to know football;-they've been playing Virgil Fox pre ents a recital for prices ranging partkipat by virtu of interest in a common prob­ a type of it themselves. After experimenting with women's touch football from 60 c nts to $1. 0. lem." The. e purpo e., or this manifold purpose, the last year, it has been put on the 1949-50 schedule for freshman girls. Unlike January 23: The Connecticut Opera As ociation presents book accomplishc to admiration. field hoc key, occer and other freshmen sports in the past, touch football i Verdi' "The Masked Ball" \vi th Jagel, Milanov If it i · important that the world should keep itself so popular that it is being played by intramural social groups on the Texas and Guarrera singing the leads. campus. Blue jeans and sweater or shirts are the girls' football uniforms. orientl'd toward that light which Plato and his disciple * * * Shelley saw ~hin ing down through the "dome of many­ A tap on the back takes the place of tackling. This Thursday Trinity continues its ervice to the colour d gla. s" which earthly cxi. tenee interposes h - * • Hartford community and coincidentally to its student tween the ev ~ of mortality and "th<' whit<' radiance of An answer to student worrie is being advanced by Alpha Phi Gamma, body by bringing a lecturer to talk on diamond . Such eternity," pure Being with its ideal forms of i1~1mutable joumalistic fratemity, San Franci co State Co ll ege, as they spon or flunk a recerche topic should be diverting. truth and good and love and beauty,-if it i important in urance. All tudents on the campus are eligible, even the "Brain ." The that the soul of man should yearn toward unity with higher a tud nt's scholarship, the lower the risk and premium. For example, the immutable soul of the universe, the ne, then this an average student pays fifty cent for coverage on a particular co urse. If book is one of the fine. t in truments of living ed ucation he flunks, he g-ets a dollar in tead of a mere dressing down by the dean. n­ The Wise Fool that the scholarly mind at its creative best could po - der the plan, dividends-if and when they come in-will go for a high school By J acque Hopkin sibly provide. journalism scholarship. With the birth of thi. book, some of our oracle .. must be dumb. o longer may we cxp ct to hear from * * One of the result of innumerable stop-overs in Mr. Kieran over the Delphic radio, as we did of late, A sudd en rainstorm at Eastern ew Mexico University gave one stud ent railroad station and air termi nals over our vacation that the beauty and mu ica l roll of Shelley's lines is an in piration fo r a new kind of classes- why not drive-in classes. Students was the observation of that uniquely American species all he wants; and from Kieran's fellow heirophant 1\Ir. simply drive up and listen to the professor lecture over a public addre s ys­ of the human male-The allege Man. Years ago there ntcmeyer that Shelley's poetry i. mere "rainbow rhe­ tem. nd when it comes to an wering que tions-one honk ... don't know was a certain amount of mental calm attached to being toric" and "rich sonority;" that Sh lley, "pathetic and the answer. Two honk . .. I know, but don't care to answer. Three honk part of a crowd in-let us say-Grand Central Station, vague," was "a romanticizing boy" who "tried to be a .... I'll be right up to an wer. becau e everyone was instantly recognizable by his pagan," and "never grew up;" a creature of too much clothing. Your mind wa never beset by doubts or enthusia m, too little intellect; a poet "of charming allege magazines frequently have circulation trouble but "The Panther," questions as to the occupation of the man next to you. imagination but weak in power of observation." who of the University of Pittsburgh has circulation problem in reverse. Their He was a banker becau e he was wearing a Homburg, "took on the • uperficial aspects of science and philos­ Ia t is ue wa uch a complete sellout that they had to offer double money spats, and a Chesterfield. The man on the other side ophy" in "terrific generaliti s" and "windy rhetoric'' back to recall enough issues for checking copies for the adverti ers. was a day laborer and obviously so due to his blue denim which "makes no sense" in such line!\ as * overalls and frayed macintosh coat. But nowadays Life, lik a dome of many-colour d glass. The manager of 'lichigan State College's women'. dormitories reports the whole situation is changed. Bankers are given to Stains the white radiance of eternity. she has found a number of persons who ar haJ>PY about the housing shortage. all sort of whimsies in their manner of dress and the And what it will do to th arid professorial "authorit~·" Fifty-two coed given temporary housing near the men'· dormitories had to com mon workingman often sport a pearl grey Homburg who has asseverated in his book that there i litllc eat meals with the men. ow that new quarters are available she reports as he goes to his job at the Acme onstruction Com· Platonism in Shelley and that that little is hardly worth I that women have come to her and requested that she place them at the bottom pany. And tho e person who are really worth investigating, it is a pity to think. The domes of such of the transfer li t. identifying are rich enough to be able to dres a they vaticinator should be pierced for • kylights or at least plea e and end up appearing like an entry in the Hobo's cleared of thick cobwebs. Who's \Vho. Profe sor ... 'otopoulo , in tracing the irradiated £>le­ There i , however, one exception to this revolution ment of Platonism through root, branch. leaf, and blo - Down Row in the world of clothing and that is the above-men· som of the lit rature of the western world, from Plato to I tioned College Man. If, to paraphra e an old saying, Shelley, perform!\ the first biopsic study of the poetic there is security in duplicity, the allege Man is one mind. Professor Highet in his new book, "The las kal When ALPHA CIII RHO conv ned unlucky depending on your poin t of of the most secure creatures in the world. His taste Tradition," tells us that "compared with the clas~ically again after the holidays, it was dis­ view) who announced his engagement. in clothing never, but never changes. Ah. yes, here educated reader of Milton-or for that matte1·, Shelley covered that two of th~> brethren had From "Kulpsville," Pa., we hear of a he comes now. otice the Oxford Grey suit and the or Eliot-the reader who ha never int(;'rested himself in lo t their pins and one had invested major cata trophe, Suzie doe not like blue, button-down shirt. The shoes are Scotch Grain the classic: is like a child reading Dicken. 'for the in the future with a ring. Paul crappie! and of a rich, heady brown. (White bucks are gauche story,' without understanding the larger ~ignificance Thomas pinned Jean. .Heicl haw, al o ALPHA DELTA PHI held its ad­ when wo1·n in public.) All the pressure of Brooks that are clear to every adult;" and Profes. 01· Notopoulos 1 a soloist. in the Pipes, flew all the way ministrative elections :mel the returns Brothers could prevail against this man and he would offers thi new and brilliant Boswellian biography of to leveland to give hi pin away. show that Brother Cromwell will not yield, ir, one inch. Ah, well, he has hi s faults poetry its If in proof that he is right as rain. I Tosh Aldrich was the lucky man (or (Continued on page 4.) but we love him . Hartford National Bank and Trust Co. For your dry cleaning. see Established 1792 ; FRA NK W. SHERMAN, '50 THE BOND PRESS, INC. CONNECTICUT'S OLDEST A ND LARGEST BANK or Printers of the Tripod Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I NED TAYL O R, '51 I "Resources to handle the largest-the will to serve the smallest." Basement of Cook "C" 94 ALLYN STREET HARTFORD, CONN. Hours: 7:00-8:00 P.M. COLLEGE BARBER SHOP Mon. & Tues. Thurs. & Fri. RAY'S TAILOR SHOP Pickup Delivery 1220 BROAD STREET COMPLETE ART AND ENGRAVING SERVICE Agents for FOR THE ADVERTISER Near Allen Pla ce 211 ZION STREET One Block Below Vernon Street COLLEGE CLEANERS The Watson Cheney Photo-Engraving Co. I BROAD STREET Satisfaction Guaranteed 130 74 UNION PLACE HARTFORD Pressing , Cleaning, Re pa iring (Opp. Trinity Dru g Co.) Jan u a ry 1 1, 19 50 --~~~~~----I,~--~------~T~H~E~T~R~IN~IT~Y~T~R~I~P~O~D~------~Pa~g~e~T~h~ree

Watson Top Scorer; !Swimming run the Yale team into the boards. (c t" on mued from page 1 ) Frosh Down Lea'cester by Large Margin The Ia t game of the week finds t he ee C Ontests L00 I eral from last year's crack f ·. h Th r m team Th . res man Boothmen in Busy W eek; who kne\\ very little about the men Bantam running up against the Co-captain Ron Watson, 6'5" for- th · e vars1ty doe not have an- y 1 G • T h from Amherst. This game wa re­ !\lor e College varsity. If things go ward f1·om Fitchburg, Mass., i lead- ~ er m~tch after their meeting with a e ame IS onig t ganlcd, for the most part, as a tune­ as expected, Morse should fall easy ing Tr inity oll ege hoopsters in scor- .TI.T. tJII Coast Guard, February . This week marks the! busiest six up for tonight's big fracas when the prey to the Trinmen. Early in the he frosh w·n h ing for the secon d consecutive year. J 1 open t eir season on days that the Trinity fre hman hoop- frosh meet the Yale freshmen in the eason the Trin Jayvee knocked over anuary 14 when the T . . preliminary to the eagerly awaited the Mor e quintet, and also early in Watson has t~ sed the ball at the Pawling. Th l\ . y meet rmJty ster will see this year. After a oop 67 times m thr~e games this to , . th" e liei_men are expected var ity contest. La t year the Yale­ the a on the frosh knocked over the h vm IS one w1th t h mashing victory in \\ hich the B&n- year, making- 36 percent of fie ld goals culty. Little . ou muc diffi- men knocked tlwm ovet· by a few Trin Jayvee in a practice game. This attempted a nd 60 percent of free stre th f 15 known about the tams trounced Leicester Junior Col- points. Booth felt that with a little contest will be held at t he fie ld house throws tried for a total of 46 points. pra nt?" tho the frosh team, but in lege by a 75-46 score, \\ hich brings luck Trinity would have won that on Saturday. · · c tee ey have looked · e t . 1 th game. Thi · year's first five ( harlie After the Morse game, exams will Last year, he Ie d t h e Tnmty squad 1 d exc P 1ona- e team's record to one and one, the with an even 200 point , racking up gff~o · Ab few reco!·ds have been fro. h are confident of a :ucce . ful Wrinn, Wally Novak, Bruno Chistolini occupy the team as well as everyone . :n o ICta 11 y roken by th Robert E. (.General) Lc , and else. The sch dule lists the next game a college record of 32 pomts against The t. h em. . . campaign. harlie Wlinn was high Da\~ Teichmann, along with Burton, Del with Hopkins, on F bruary 11, after Amh erst in hi s biggest scorin g night. the O \~e~-~~f ?f t~e squad hes m scorer for Trinity in the Leicester He clicked on 66.7 percent of his foul rott pR L ?.Iswl mmme; of Ray Par- game with 1 points, but many of the ~astro, and tan Lee) will attempt to the new ·emester has begun. shots in 194 -49 to win the coaches D" k zay e, ere, Ed 1\Iittleman, and substitute , receiving th ir first chance foul shooting trophy. !C uver. L~st year's fro h finished a! o showed great promise. . . t~e season w1 th a record of even Th · After a ho!J day layoff smce Decem- VICtories and one defe t th b y I IS past Monday, the IIilltoppers CASE, LOCKWOOD AND BRAINARD ber 16, Trin ity returns to action next It is believed howeveat' 'th attthy a _ell. met the Massachuset~ Univer ity Printers to Trinity College for Many Years . . M ' ' a ey w1 fre hmen, at Amhcr t. This i;sue A Division of Connecticut Printers, Inc. week w1t. h games. aga A mst assachu- better that record · Th en·· nex t meet went to pre s before the game, how- setts Umv r Jty at. mherst on Mon- is against Yale on January 17, and e•er. The :\[assachusetts team was a 85 TRUMBULL ST. HARTFORD, CONN. day, Yale at Hartford o_n Wednesday, this should be nip and tuck. and I nstitute of Tech------q::.L::.:Ie::.:s:.:t.:.:io:.:n:_:_n:.:_:la::_:I:_:·k:..._:f_:::o.:_r ~c~o::_:a~c:_:h~F_:r~e~d-B~o~ot:::h.:______. ______nology at the Boston Garden on Th ursday. The scoring records for three game : G Ft Pt Avg. Ron Watson, Fitchburg 17 12 46 15.3 Bill Pitkin, Hartford 14 7 a5 11.6 J im Curtin, Hartford 10 12 32 10.2 Larry Hutnick, Hartford 12 4 28 9.3 Bob Jachen , Leonia, N.J. 10 4 24 .0 Bill Goralski, Avon 0 1 1

Sam akaso, T ew Haven 1 0 2

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' Home Games- tation W IGM - 1050 on your dial The F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Co., New York, N.Y. January 11, 1950 Page Four THE TRINITY TRIPOD

Down Fraternity Row PSI UPSILON is back to work Ed Roth has promiseci nothing but again! The only comments being is­ kings' banquets; and Harry will have (Continued from page 2.) sued from "Club 81" at the moment bigger and better jokes. Bob Landers serve as pre ident and Brother Had­ are all very grim. Castmg aside our is going to take driving, and Don low as vice-president, Brother Me­ post vacation resentment, Psi U wel­ Rathbone singing, lessons. Glister as recording ecretary and comed the return of Brother Arm­ F. S, Brother Sheahan as corresponding strong back into the fold with open A bright future was forecast for secretary. Brother Wright was elect­ arms. As a . mall token of their TAU ALPHA by a convincing triumph ed historian and Brother Steelman gratitude, the Wonder Stores present­ over the Alpha Delt's Ly our basket­ will continue as steward. The brother­ ed the lodge with a giant sized bottle ball squad, which was mightily as ist­ hood takes pleasure in announcing the of P.M. The crowning blow fell on ed by the aggressive playing of Hoot pledging of Duane Newton of West Saturday night, when an anonymou · Nickolson. Pledge Blank will do his Hartford. We wish Brothers Aiken brother uncorked the giant jug and future nightclubbing in the company and Humphries the best of luck in bequeathed himself a rl'ther substan­ of mop and pail. Henry Palau's win­ their new work and look fonvard to tial loan. ter frolic was enjoyed by all the ABBY INN-Monchesteo-279·R their return. Brothers Grill, Camp­ ST. ANTHONY HALL has only guests. Brother MacLean has pro­ Bmv·s BARN-E Moncheste.-286·R CHRISTMAS TREE INN-E. Do •.-264 -W·2 RED DOOR5-Monche

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