l \ , t tt

Volume XLV HARTFORD, CONN., APRIL 14, 1948 19

Senior Ball to Highlight Gala College Announces New Dormitory 125th Anniversary Week-end Chairman Reynolds I Rates and Student Allocation Annou~ces May 14 lconology Defined ·All Rooms on Main As Sen1or Ball Date A H.dd M · R f h 25 St d d Campus Standardi%ed On i\lay 14, 194, the Senior class S I en ean1ng evieW 0 t e U entS an At 90 Dollars a Term will hold its annual promenade at the By Erwin Panofsky 1/R . II b c •t• Faculty Accept Hartford lub on Prospect Street. evtew y rt IC With due foresight the- dance commit- "How to read some pictures; or pi Gamma M u Bid B} Frank Burns tee ha~ chosen a weekend not too in- what is Iconology," was explained In English Dept. '!'he Trinity Chapter or Pi Gamma Th .'cnate ~nd ollcge officials conveniently close to final exams and last Thursday night in the hemistry ~lu. a 1 'ational Suetal St•ienee Honor I han' bctn w01·kmg and planning to- also one which will provide quite a Auditorium by Dr. Erwin Panofsky By Daniel B. Risdon Society. ha~ l'lCC'tcd tw nty-fhe stu- geth<'l" for over a month on a new bit of athletic entertainment. as "not only the study of images, but If th recent ''Trinity Revie''" i~ as dent and faculty membt'r~ for 191 , sclwdull' of dormitory room rentals The committee is made up of chair- also the interpretation and under- rl'prcs ntativc of the intellectual pur- l'rofessm· Edward Troxt>ll announc(•d and a revised procedure for the man Warren H. Reynolds of Alpha standing of the hidden meanings of suits of Trinity students a~ it would April 10. Pt·ofessor Tt·oxell, Secre- as~ at Trinity. Roclwll , . Y.; CharlC's 11. Brit•ant, m n in them. This pat·tial uncloubling cial difficulties existent in the other great paintings, Dr. Panofsky gave a A periodical produced largely by I ru rtford; Edward ll. Burns, West of dot·mitory rooms will r suit in a lesson in reading pictures. Starting the students for the college com- Hartford; Floyd 'ol , Thompson, three Jl r cent reduction in th total prom . with Titian's famous painting of the munity, and one would like to wish, onn.; .John P. Fandt•l, .Jr., Yonk 'rs, clollat· income to the coil g , although, "It is the hope of the chairman and erapis, he traced the development of for a wider audience, is an ambitious N.Y.; Samuel , . Goldstein, T!urtrord· the net effect will produce a two and the committe that all cia es will see that three-headed animal through undertaking. Everything considered, Leonard ]!;. Gr cnb rg, llartfonl: a half per ·cnl increas in average fit to attend in great numbers. It will centuries ?f ~1:t and pointed out the, i ~ i ,a min~r miracl thai the "Re- I Douglas Harding·, ll astings-on ll ud~ rental over the pre-war averag , and not only be a service to themselves in spectal SlgmflCance of the three YlCW somenow app ' Ut ... Whatever son, .. •. Y.; .John P. Harrig-an, Bristol, a twelvP and a fifth pPr t·cnt incr ase having a good t ime there, but also an head ; that of a wolf, lion and dog, the qualifications r aders arc forced I onn.; Donald K. ,Jacobs, Hat·tford. ov r this year's doubl d-up rat s. aid to the finances of all t heir school which repre~ented the past, present to make a~oui_ ih_i s most recent issue, (;~raid 1\T. LaZarre, West Hartford; Th point which will cause the most organizations which are in great need and future 111 that orde1·. Similarly, they wtll f md ll1 1i much to commend. ltnton T. 1acy, Tantuckct, lass.; altet·cation among the pr sent rcsi­ of no further jeopardizing of their he explained the evolution of the Th appearance of work by freshmen Elliott L. 1\ lancall , Jlattford; Elliott dent stud nls is the r vised room funds," said' Mr. Reynolds. horse in art by mean of a ·erics of (Continued on page :{.) A. Munay, West Jlarlford; Richard assignment. The form r rule that any "We are not choo ·ing one of the pictures by Leonardo da Vinci. B. Quinn, Jlartfonl; Edward Reynolds, student cou ld retain his same room more expensive bands because we feel Born in Germany, Dr. Panofsky Work ProJ· ects in Richmond Hill, N.Y.; orman Stein- wi ll not apply next y ar. Instead, that for a S nior Prom the students taught at the University of Hamburg felcl, Hamden, onn .; Irvin 'linton uppcrclass t·oom assignments will be will not need this added color." for twelve years before coming to the Britain and H 0 II and Wade, ornelia, G orgia; Arthur E. made on a s niority basis by classes. The dance committee wishes to re­ nited States in 1933. A member of Walmsley, Ayct·, 1\lass.; and Jos ph Applications fot· ro ms must be made quest thai if any student or campus the In titute for Advanced Study at Opened to Students G. Whelan, Buffalo, . Y. in the Business office between the organization wishes to make any sug­ Princeton, he is now a Cl1arles E! · • The · hours of 10 :00 and 11 :00 A. M. and gestions regarding the manner in 10 • at10nal Student Association otton professor at Harvard Univer- ampus Commission today unfolded Educati.On Group 12:00 to 1:00 P. 1\1. on the following which this prom should be conducted, sity. f h sc·h __rlule '.>:'1.' present classes : Juniors, urt er work plans by which Trinity uch uggcstion should be addressed students may help defray th ir ex- Seen As Solution Apt tl 19-2.3; Sophomores, April 26- to Warren II. Reynolds, P. 0. Box 110. .f h 1 :lO; Frcshm n, May 3-7. An individual P nse~ 1 t cy arc p anning on travel- T T h Admi sion to the dance will be $5, in g to Europe this summer. These 0 eac er Study room application , available at the and dancing will be from 9 till 1 a. m. Glee Club Concert office, must be . igned for ach room plans are com bination work and ll·avel Because of the g t· nicr n ed for by all the roommates who wish to Held at Pomfret projects having as th ir primary a im tcachC'rs and because of the gr at r World Federation La t unday, the Glee lub l·naug- the rehabilitation of Europe's war- reS•· J>O 11 se t 0 th e en II"mg among Trinity occulion piys toany be on presented room. Thiat sthe applica- office Will Be Debated u_rat. d its first post ;v ar season by I Lorn cities and industries. Ther is s_tudents, Trinity ol lerr,., has estub- 1>Y one student at the above hours. Trinity ollege's Debating Society mgtng a concert _at P_omfreL. The I al.so. ,a p.lan _whe_reby slu. de_nis can lt shcd a n w c.oursc of study to all vi- 'l' l1l' rooms will be assigned in ac- 11 will travel to Philadelphia this week- concert, under the d1rect10n of Profes- h < vc~t Ct ops tn c1ther Bntam or thC' ale the lcachmg shortage. c·ordance with this sched ule immedi- end to ncounter the Colleges of Bryn sor Clarence Watters, was of a varied etherlands and obtain as a return I 'allt•d a group study rather than a a.c, 1Y aft t· the applications are re- Mawr and Haverford on Friday and nature and proved to be succcs ful. their board and keep plus a small major study because of the divi~ion cetvcd,· with the first one received 'Saturday, AI)l·il 16 and 17. The topic The program featured a group of amount of spending money. of th • requirPd cout·scs between at (Continued on page :t) to be di cu. sed in both debate by seventeenth century A Cappella num- 1n ( :real Bt·itain therP will be two lea ·t two department!>, th new course Porter lapp, Raymond Snow, and bers, and cgro spirituals with Joe di~tinct work projects: one dealing 1·es< mbles the prc-m d group now Peter .Van l\1eire is "Resolved, That Brush acting as soloi st in the latter with harvesting ct·ops and r habilita- being givt>n at the college. In terfraternity Council a Policy of W rld Federation Should group. Jack Byrd and Wendell Blak tion work, the other conccming op- nd(•r the new plan a student who Be Adopted." added variety to the program with a portunities for stud nis desiring to wish s to study in the education Elects Officers; While the two Penn. ylvania col- rendition of Bach'· Adagio in A and work at the Olympic gam s in Lon- g-rou p and be recommended for a Bellis President leges a rc being ncountered over this De Falla's Malaguena arranged for don. The Netherlands have made a leaching certificate must complete weekend, a no t her threesome of t he a piano duct. 1\Ir. Lawrence Madison ·strong bid to attain American slu satisfactorily three courses or 18 In a meeting held last Friday, the Society will meet the Fort Trumbull of Norfolk, Connecticut, sang a group dent aid by sponsoring more than five ~t- nH•ster hours, in ·ach of two depart­ Interfraternity Council elected new Extension of the niversitv o£ Con- of tenor solo. . work projects. These deal in the I menU;, such as mathematics and officers for next year. necticut in a home debate.- The Trin The Glee lub's schedule will be majority with reconstruction of homes physics, history and economics, tc. David 0. Bellis of Alpha Delta Phi Orators wct·c defeated by this same continued with concert~ at :\lilbrook and fa<:tOJ"ies in the most severely !Study in these fields will prepare him replaces Harry Montgomery of Psi college a few weeks ag-o . The- subject and Salisbury next unday. On l\Iay bomb-\\ reeked citie~. Students wi~h- f o tt ach the same ~ubjects in second­ (. psilon as President and Seymour ?f this return ngag-ement will be the 1, the Glee Club sings at We~tminstcr ing more information on any of these ary ~chools, both public and private. Page, .Jr., of Alpha hi Rho succeeds ts sue of ni,·ersal i\lilitary Train ing. and on ;\lay 6 for the • · ew Haven plans arc urged to contact immcdi- Tht· student mu~t supplement these Leonard Overton of Delta Phi as Scc­ Jam e.· N. Egan, the ocicty's ad- Alumni. This last concert will be fol- ately either Ted Lockwood OJ' Clint eourscs by completing three courses J"eiat·y of the Council. Other members vi cr, has announced that tentative lowl'd by a dance and lavi ·h enter- \Vade. in Education, including practice teach- at·e William E. Duy of Delta Psi, 1 1 lans It t"tltll 0 tll The Pt.JlCS ·11 1 b h 1 The S, 'SA will have its final re- ing-, and the bas·ic collc>

~be ~rinitp ~rtpob Overruled Again TRINITY COLLEGE, Hartford, Conn. Member Musical Notes I_ Associated Collegiate Press By George Stowe Publi.hcd Weekly throughout the Academic Y<•nr by t.he STUD],;NTS 0~' TRINITY COLLEGE ubseriplion- $3.00 per Year Student Sub•cription included in th<• Tuition Fee Entered nl Hartford, Conn .. as s ·cond clto, matter February II, 19·17, under the Act or March 3, 1879. Beethoven's "Triple Concerto" (for Violin, Cello and Advertising Rates J:o"'urnished on Application Piano), very seldom heard anywhere, was given its The columns of THE TRINITY TRIPOD nrc at all times open Hartford premiere last unday and plaudits are in to alumni, undcrgrnduntes and other~ for the dtacus ton of matters of interest to Trmtty men. order for the Hartford School of Music for serving up I such a rare bird in their festive all-Beethoven concett­ WED NESDAY, APRIL 14, 1948 uncloubtedly the most ambitious program presented by any music school in the city. ED!TO!t-IN-CHIE~' Rob<·rt Jenkins It was a program which would give even the most ASSOCIATE EDITOR )fANAGING ~;OITOR eminent of mu ic schools a few apprehensive qualm _ Harold W. Glcn•on, Jr. Jtobcrt Herbert NEWS BOARD ranging, as it did, from the brief Promet~eus Overture Clinton Wade Edgar W. Mullhcws Norman Steinfeld to the ebull ient Eighth symphony, and mcluding the NEWS STAFF A. Johneon \V. Robin on B. N ichoiBOn Fourth Piano Concerto. That an orchestra of around R. Mullen R. Reerl P. VanMetre sixty members could do such a handsome job as they IB. Rnu n. J<·nkins H. Pere"l. H. Burke Jo'. nurn~ .J. Coote did is a tribute to their training. Geot·ge Heck, the FEATURE F.DITOR conductor, has disciplined his orchestra well. To be George Stowe sure, those who were looking for flaw undoubtedly FEATURE STAFF R. Herbert D. S. Smith B. Rau found them, but the overall performance certainly D. 1-:dwnrd• deserved high praise. We have heard many profes­ SPOR'l'S IWITOR Hichnrd Avitnhil<• sional performances of poorer quality. ASSISTANT SI'OHTS ~;DITOR The Triple Concerto has been called "uninspired," M. H. Rnnkin but we certainly found it engrossing on the fir t hear­ SPORTS STAFF J. Welter R. ntum ing. The opening i5 Mozartean; but it i not long be­ Elton L. Smith 0. M!tclu•ll fore undeniable Beethovenesque effects come to the FRATERNITY EDITOK , J nnu11 Sen n ne-ll fore. The ensemble playing of Messrs. Doellner, REWRITE EDITOR MAKEUP l·:DI':OR Edwards, and Davenny was certainly exemplary; never Leone! Mitcht'll f,rthur Amtt1n ART EDITOR was the piano allowed to overshadow the other voices. Stanley RoJgers The Fourth Piano oncerto has received two per­ ART STAFF Rory O'Connor Richard ll!!linrd formances on the Bu hnell stage this year-and with PIIOTOGRi\PHY EDITOR a glow of civic pride we can boast that this was much H. Jones superior to the one with the Cleveland Orchestra. Ward ASSISTANT PI!OTOCRAPJ!Y EDITOR Trin -Inanity A. Brown Davenny gave a clean and crystalline performance. BUS! ESS MAN GER By Bob Herbert The Eighth symphony, which someone has called the Peter Detwiler "Comedic Humaine" of music, is a product of one of CIRCULATION 1ANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER John MncKcason Robert Bowden There is a hidden tragedy in a Spring at college when the season turns the happiest periods of Beethoven's life and is full of CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT into the traditional rat-race to finals, the proverbial last laugh for the fed the earthy good-humoredness of the man. It is a work James Hallyday Donald Farrow up faculty. Two sure fire symptoms are invariable (1) the great self dece_it that presents a good many difficulties for the amateur ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT that April and three weeks of May arc nothing more than lovely, langUid Richard Kichline James Scann•ll orchestra, but most of these were surmounted by the John Lovell John McGaw months and that Uti year a ystem for exnm review will be found, no pain, group. The playing was admirable in its spirit. no strain; and (2) the "we can get enough money to buy a small schooner and go at·ound the world" routine. There is nothing truer than the saying Revenue Collectors " aps rise in lh springtime." In seven weeks look for the haiTied look, nervous twitches and benzedrine ... The Senat has turned down t.h SA's plan to co- ordinate welfare fund contribution . The NSA wisely Ti'l;p T\\li~ C1M'I!' 1~ ct'i'M'I!lW'' t<'lrlf~y ' 1;1'1' .t,N> <'il~&,t'.J'I!I'•'~ 15'f W,i,!j!,J.<:yr £:,\r.a, is dusty and forgotten in back mood of the people living within a few feet of the project it niveling equalitarianism where it did not issues of the Trinity Ivy ... phone. If a Gandhi-like serenity has enveloped the belong. While America has subsequently experienced dwellers of the second floor in ook A, for instance, in Time was when the freshman and sophomore classes would conduct a a history of democratic growth, France has subjected all probability the caller will establish contact with scaled-down wat' much to the discomfiture of the Hartford Police. On ?.larch herself through the liberali ~m of Robespierre and Dan­ the inner sanctum after only a few hours of relentless 16 ths. our hardy predecessor would gird their loins for mortal combat, the ton to an infamous succession of governments charac­ ringing. Once contact has been made, this is still no freshman class establishing a propaganda headquarters in Hartford and the terized by ranting communism, strutting militarism assurance that the caller ·will reach the intended party, sophomores ranging the city in bands to find the hq. and callow freshmen. and disintegrating bureaucracies. because if the person called happens to live in the In the dark hours of night the freshmen would slap poster extolling their One of the monum ntal disasters of liberalism has outer-most reaches of Cook, the so very fed-up chap class on the most pt·ominent surface in town (one year a banner on the been its cancerous implicit war on religion. The reason who answered the phone may say, "Oh, pshaw," and memorial arch) and try to avoid capture by the . ophomores and police. The . 'l . 1 IS t s natural insistence on the preeminence of matena simply step out of the booth, take a puff or two on his forme1· would truss up captives, the latter would merely conduct them to problems and its employment of a farm and factorY cigarette, muster some energy, and give out with a few jail. When the sun of the 17th shone on campus the remaining freshmen prtesthood to supervise the great, ugly machi11e of earth shouts, wait, and step back in the booth and make would hoist one of their number with a class banner sewn to hi shirt into profuse apologies. an elm and attempt to defend it from the onrushing ophomores. In the worms it has created. Man is an individual with very Granted that most calls are not of any serious end one of the classes would be victorious to be forever famous by heroic definite obligations to the soul in him and must not nature; it only takes one failure on a call of a serious poetry or parodied prose in the Ivy, and everyone would get out of jail, untied, be interfered in that communion by cries of bread. nature to put both students and college in a rather or prompt medical attention. o mild green ties commemorated St. Pat in l\Ia~ is also a part of an organic society and must ~f embarrassing situation. those days but he did not go unremembered. a rlght assume those responsibilities for which he 15 fitted by natural selection. April 14, 1948 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Page Three

Troxell Presides New "Review" ~oard Theta Xi Pled es Campo and Whelan IFr eshmen Elect O ver Convention Ch~~en In Elect1on 1 g Get Graduate Bid . R t1rmg Editor-in-Chief Harold w. Seven Undergrads A !'\Chol:w:;hip for two years of Class Officers O f Geologists (,Ieason, Jr., announced toclav the The Rushing Committee of the graduate work has been awarded to names of the newly-elect d ~1litors Interfrat rnity ouncil has :nmounc d .\lkhnel Campo, Trinity !l'Yl'll Trinity undl'r- After an unsuccessful attempt he Association of American State "Tr1'n1·t R · " a t;mdunte Fellowship for '1 -'·l!l. t Y cv1ew. Thomas C. F. graduates to the newly founded earliPr in the year the Freshman class eologists, Profe:;sor Edwat·cl L. L0\\'1'" 1 t d :\lichael Campo won the 'niYcrsity G o was e e<: e editor-in-chief· Trinity hapter of Theta .·i. finally sure edcd in electing a slate roxell pre. ided over the annual Ha1·t·y ~r B k ' .'cholar.·hip from the School of T '' · rae ·en, executive editor The recent Theta \.i pledges are: of officers Ia t Wednesday. James B. Higher • tudies of the Faculty of meeting of that body in Tu caloo a, and F. cott Bill you, bu. ines man- \Yilliam Robin::;on, '50, of Ba) side, Curtin wa: elected Pr sident, William Philosophy (Romanc Language's) of Alabam~, on l\larch 31. agcr. Long L·land; ?.Iartin Parlan '50 of II. Quortrup, Vice-President, and Drawmg up an agenda for the John ?.I. oote, Leonard Overton, Brooklyn. '. Y.; Kingston 'How~rd, .John. Hopkins University. He says \\'illinm II. Van Lanen, Secretary­ assembly, Dr. Tt·oxell heard reports Robert W. Herbert, Robert Blum and '51, of West Hartford; Rodnev rit­ t hnt he will !'\lll'cializ in Italian. Trcasm·er. o~ how.state.geologtsls.could help in Edwa~d J. Perone were named to the tenden, '51, of 1 odH.•:;ter, >. Y.; ,Joseph \Ylwlan won an eight-hundred urtin is a graduate of Bulkeley 1 d1scoveun~ aw matenals for war I elhtm.·IU] board. George \V. towe will Grant ?.Iclntosh, '51, of Yonkers, 1 • clollar Graduate l•'ellowship in m ri · 11 igh chool, here in Hartford. He and atomiC energy a~d how they remam as circulation manager. IY.; John Hatfield, '51, of Philadelphia; cnn history from the niversity of play d on the Ft·eshman basketball c~ulcl map. out the vanous re~ources T~e "Review" will publish a special and \\'arner Behley, '51, of West l'ochestt•r. team. Quortrup, a native of Douglas­ or the. n~t~d States. D1scu s1ons of anmversary i sue on or about l\1ay 15 Hartford. Theodore Lockwood becam second­ ton, Long Island, came to 'l'rinity new sc1enb.fiC methods and techniques as part of the commemoration cere. College authorities hav turned over altt•nutll' to six winners of Pepsi-Cola from th nited tales avy and Fellowships from a total of 729 ap­ were held, and the position of . tate monies of the college' 125th annivcr- eabury :30 as a m ling place for the Trinity chool in w York. He was geology in regard to the nited States sary celebration. fraternity and hav designated the plicant: from l!iG East m colleg s. a m mber of the Freshman football These three year gradual scholar­ Geological Survey and the national first entry of Jarvis as living quar- team. \'an Lanen, from Red Wing, conomy was cla1·ificd. ters for the Theta Xi's next year. :hips arC' n part of Pepsi-Cola's pub­ i\Tinnesota, is an alumnu:; of Red Wing lic scrvic program. After one day of discussion the Review II igh .'c hool and is al. o a navy man. group was taken on a 500 mile tour ( ontihued from page 1.) Trinity Campaign lie was 11 member of the Freshman sponsored by th tate of Alabama New Room Rates ba:k tbnll team. xamining- factories, iron ore forma~ augurs well, and it is to be hoped For Improvements ( ontinued fr m page 1.) tions, and other sights. A 17-car that others will emulate the example In Final Stages motorcade quipped with police escort of lessrs. oote, turges, a n d given pri01·ity. In the case of room· Prep School Glee and repair truck bore the geologists Thomas. Tt·inity College alumni in the Hart­ mateR of diffe1·cnt lasses, such as a north to twenty miles within the Active faculty interest in the "Re­ ford area are entering the final stage junior wishing to I'Oom with two Clubs Give Concert of their drive to help raise a million ;;ophomores, any room requested will state's border and south to within Yiew" is evident in the handsome TllC' I• i fteenth Annual Preparatory and a half dollars for campus im­ be subj<•ct to change if a higher thirty miles of Fl01·;da. Feted by the f1·onti piece by Professor C. E. Tay­ chool i\1 usic FcstiYal was h ld at the pl·ovements in the 125th Anniver ary priority group, such as thre juniors Birmingham hamber of Commerc , lor and in the cholarly article by Bushnell on Saturday, April 10. DeYelopment Program of the colleg . or two junio1·s and a sophomore, re­ Republic Steel, and the niversity of Profe,.sor T. L. Hood announcing a 'chools parli ipating indudecl hoate, Sydney D. Pinney of Wethersfi ld quc:.;t the sum room during th w k Alabama, the group took turns sitting new discovery concerning Browning Deerli hi, Loomis, llotchkiss, and is area chairman. A total of 723 scheduled for the top class involved. in Govemor Jim Fulsom's chair upon and Blake, an interesting xposition Taft. complete with the necessary and ex­ Trinity alumni in the Hartford area This plan will und ubtedly cause arrival in ?.Iontgomery, the state cap­ The F stival was d dicated to the cellent illustrations from Blake's il­ have given $151,413 in a total of some consternation on campus, but ital. elebrating· the 100th anniv r­ college and :.;tudent leaders feel that memory of II nry Denison Fish, form­ sary of the founding of Alabama's lustrated "Gray." The "Review" is $1,161,000 subscribed to date as a indeed fortunate to be privileged to birthday present for Connccticu i' the present plan is very inadequat e1· Director of :\lusic at lfotchkis geological sut·vey, the meeting was and that lhc n w ventur is c rtainly chuol, who died in l•'cbnmry. the largest ever held with representa­ publi h Professor Hood's "Browning second oldest college. Mr. Pinney is organizing· clean-up committ cs to a vast impt·ov m nt. Th pl'OgTf\111 includ<'

::\1oskal swung hard at an incoming Beidler Optimistic I Dismal Outlook Is - Hilltoppers Lose Two in South,· pitch. he succeeded only in tapping the ball out in front of the plate. For Freshman Nine Fo re seen for Frosh • 7 6 2 1 Pitkin eagerly grabbed the ball, The Freshman baseball sq~ad has And va rs ity Track Georgetown an d Navy W In/ - I - stepped on home, and rifled a throw been practH·mg. . on 'Tt··lnl'tv· FJCld . .for I . . Burton, Scully Hurl - to i\fahon at fi1·st for an apparent the past week under the able dn ec- The 194 ed1bon of the Trinity home two run!l. Trinity collectC'd 1:3 double play, hut the umpire ruled the lion of Coach Joe Beidler. The squad team will face a rather di m 1 3-Hitters At Navy hits of O'Connor and Cora for a total ball foul. A long and bitter argument has been narrowed down to. twenty season unless there is more stude~t \Vben Trinty ' s ""r.aster vaca t'10n o f - o f ::.·•o b as:~· b uc• 1e ft nme· men b ~se. ensuetl, but to no avail. Amazingly nd now 'ouch Beidler JS wo.rk- I ?" men a interest and backing. The \'a · ficially began on March 24, most of The vi1s1tors struck early, Jumpmg enough, the identical play was im­ ing with his men on the finer pom t s rs1ty, the school's undergraduates departed 1 to a 2-run advantage aftc•r three in- mediately 1·epeated, and this time of the game. The team's first battl.e under the tutelage of Ray Oosting, for their homes for a restful (?) two 1 nings of play. The Hoy as were quick the double killing was allowed. It will be at ~Jonson on Thursday, Apnl has lost several key men, such as weeks' vacation. But for Dan Jessee',; to recove1·, however, scoring two tal- now appeared that the strategy had 22. . Joe Piligian and Ray Hal ted who varsity diamond men, it meant only lic•s in each of the fou1·th and fifth worked, but Dolio, lined out a single, Of the team positions, first base JS hold se,·eral coJiege records in the a short lapse untiil they departed for fram s, to assume a 4-2 lc•ad. to score Corley with the winning run. the biggest question right now. Jim sprints and hurdles. These events now a tht·ee-game southern road jaunt. Th .JC'ssc•C'men ralliC'd in the top Bulmer, Dick hecani, and Frank lgo The schedule originally called for of the sixth, and scored three 1·uns NAVY are fighting for the starting spot, and have to be filled with capable men be- games with the University of Ma1·y- to give Trin a one run lead at this With avy's Ron Burton holding Coach Beidler has been unable to fore the squad can regain the hal­ land, Georgetown, and avy, starting point. Kunkiewicz sta1·ted this out­ Trinity to three well-spaced singles, decide between them as yet. Second ance which led them to econd place April 1. Unfortunately, Old .Man burst, whacking a 2-hase blow. He the Middies defeated the Hilltoppers base is also a weak spot on the team, in the Eastern Intercollegiate meet Weather played his hand in this af- scored a moment later as Bill L ahy by a 2-1 count, at Annapolis, April 3. but Bob Sharpe, who has had most last year. fair and wash d out the Maryland lashed out a triple over Alagia's head Jack Scully pitched well for the vis­ of his experience in the outfield, will game without ceremony. The Hill in deep right. Marty Rouse walked, There are, however, four co llege itors, matching Burton's three-hitter. probably fill this position. Ed Luc1 or f toppers managed to finish out and Leahy scored on Bill Pitkin's fly, ,Jack's fate was scaled in the very will be the team's shortstop and Tom record ho lders remaining v1ho wilJ the schedule, however, dropping two which was miraculously caught.. Bob first inning of play when Navy's aud is the likely starter at third form the nucleus of the team this sea­ tough decisions, both by one run to BaJTows' single scored Rous with Carl Goodie! found a pitch to his base. The most promising outfielders son. They are: J ohn oonan, the out­ the latter teams. th • final tally of the inning. liking and whacked a long homer, arc Harold Schwerdtfeger, Jim Pick- tanding shot putter; Edward Lem- In the nation's capital on April 2, In their half of this inning, the with Armstrong on base. Thus Scully h ieux, holder of t he two-mil e record · ett, and Harry Yarrow. These t ree John Rott, discus t hrower,· and' Tr inity faced Georg town's formida- Uoyas managed to eke out a score, to lost his first decision in collegiate ble IIoyas. The final score of George- knot the count. In the final three wi ll be the regular outfield for the competition; last yea1· the Trinity ace team. The catching duties will be Seward Epp, a pole vaulter. Lemieux town 7, Trinity 6, indicated the kind frames, each club pushed across one and Epps are t he on ly one entered in racked up six consecutive victories. shar d by Bill Quortrup and Zazzaro, of gam -a thriller to the end, in more 1·un, necessitating an extra in- their respective events this year, and T he J esseemen scored their lone and possibl y J ohn Frid ay. Coac h one extra-inning. ning. the lack of depth in t hese events may run of the fray in the third f ra me. Beidler does not know how strong Joe Julavtis, one of last year's With the count knotted at 6-6, Trin- It was cully himself who accounted plague t he team during the year. the opposition will be, but his outlook Th F h t' d mou nd stalwarts, pitched the entire ity was unable to come through in for this score with a solid single, scor­ . . . . e res man aggrega 1011, un er ten f rame , yielding 11 safeties, and th top of the tenth. In the exciting ing J ack orco1·an, who had previous­ for t he com ing seaso. n IS optnmstiC. t h e d1' rec t1' 0n of St u p ar k s, f aces t he striking ou t seven. I n a losing cause, home half, Alagia started t he f ire­ The reason for this IS that t here are I 't t' t h 't Th ly been given a free-ticket. . . W lk d same S I ua 10n as e vars1 y. e Captain Marty Rouse, Whit y Kun- works with a 3-sackcr to deep center. In the eigh th inning, both Scully two good , JJm a er an squad is rat her s mall and it i not kiewicz, and J ack Mahon each con- The strategy now dictated passes to a nd Bill Leahy reached base on sing­ Fred Prosiatkowski, on t he squad. very well balanced. The main weak ­ tributcd three blows to the attack, Nap! s and orley to load t he buses, le , but Burton bore down in t he Beidler ex pr esse~ confidence t hat they nesses of t he Frosh are in the pole Kunki ew icz smashed a double, triple, making greater t he possibi lity of a clutch to retire the s id e without a will be able to give. any team a tough va ulting and long dista nce depart­ and single in four tries, and drove twin-killing. A momen t later, wh n scor e. battle. Other cand1dates f or the team ments. Ou tstanding on t he team is Burton ·truck out six men along are: Dick DePaoli s, Bob F a n ~ ll , J ohn J oe Leo who appeared in Madison Trinity AB R ll (;eorgetown B R H t he route, a nd walked on ly one. Carey, J ohn Burbank, Bob E ll JOtt, and Square Garden several times and who Ba rrows, ss 4 0 1 Dolio, 1b 6 0 1 ScuJiy, on t he other hand, struck out Bill Keady. seems to have more experience than Heintz, cf 4 0 Connor, 2b .J 1 1 only f our, a nd gave up a total of six Beidler expects that his top hi tters any other man 011 the squad. 1\Iahon, lb 5 1 3 Connoll y, 2b 0 0 0 bases on balls. The Trin infield came will be Ludorf, Schwerdtfeger, Yar- Both tea ms work out together so Kunkiewicz, 3b 4 1 3 Ruba, cf 5 2 2 up wit h t hree double plays behi nd row, and Walker. Wa lker is said to that t he Fre hmen may gain experi­ Scully, rf 2 0 0 Palvey, 3b 4 l 1 Scully, the team playing errorless be one of the best hi tter on the squad ence f rom the varsity group. The Leahy, lf, r f 3 1 2 Al agia, rf 4 1 1 ba ll as against two mi scues for t he and he may pl ay in the outfield when seaso n wi ll tart soon for the varsity ; Pit kin, c 4 0 0 orley, lf 4 j 2 1 idshipmen. he isn't pitching. the first meet is wi t h Union on the Rouse, 2b 4 2 3 aples, ss 4 0 1 This year's schedule includes t wo 24th. The F reshmen will start on the orcoran, If 3 0 0 Mos ka l, c 4 1 1 games wi t h the Wesleyan F rosh. 30th in a meet wi th H opki ns. Ponsall e, rf 2 0 1 0' onnol·, p 2 0 1 HUNTER PRESS, INC. J ulavits, p 4 0 0 Gorra, p 2 0 0 JUST A STONE'S THROW C. G. CONN, LTD. CO. 81-83 Laurel Street Totals 39 6 13 Totals 39 7 11 Trinity ...... 101 003 010 0-6 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ::; orgetown .. 000 221 100 1-7 FIN ES T PRINTING to the O F ALL KIN DS AND TYPES Repairing $500 TO $1000 EARNINGS Andy's Auto Service HUBERT DRUG Private Instruction For capable freshman or sopho­ Re pairs, Gas, O il and Accessories Two Telephones: more in spare-t ime ales work; Gas Station-Broad and Vernon "Over the Mus ical Rocks" training provided. Good references P hone 7-6092 Tele phone 7-2 126 required ; no investment. One man 2-7016 - 2-1044 will be chosen. Write, stating Garage-177 Seymour Street 213 ZION STREET 209 Trumbull Street qualification , to ervice Cry tal Phone 2-6652 Company, 92 Lafayette Parkway, Yo ur frie nd s e xpect you to send Roc hester 10, New York. When You Think of Shoes Packard Boot Shop RUST CRAFT GREETING CARDS CAN FILL YO R EEDS beca use of t heir attractive ne ss and HEUBLEIN S IZES 5 to 14 satisfy in g se nti ments- at On Asylum Street Better Shops and Department Stores HOTEL (n e ar Allyn The ater) GFOX~CO . Society for Savings ESTABLISHED 1847 HARTFORD - Trinity Barber Shop Main Office: A MEETING PLACE FOR 209 Zion Street 3 I Pratt Street TR INITY STUDENTS SATISFIED CUSTOMERS GOODALL GRAY Hartford Conn. FOR THREE GENERATIONS FOR MANY YEARS FLANNEL SUIT - • • • HONISS fi~· WEST HARTFORD BRANCH: $50.00 For many years t his hotel has Q UALI TY FISH A ND SEA FOOD 994 Farmingt on Avenue been famous fo r VISIT OUR F AMOUS RESTAURANT 22 Stat e Street, Hartford, C onn. Rich, soft fabric that looks and Fine Food and Good Service. Telephone 2-4177 feels like costly import-belies its COLLEGE G RADUATES modes t price . In the popu lar "uni­ Would Do Well to Look Into the Field of Printing HOLIDAY versity model" - single breasted As a Worthwhile Career An Adventure in CASE, LOCKWOOD & BRAINARD CO. wi th three buttons and center A Di vision of Connecticut Printers, Incorporated Good Smoking HARTFORD I C O NNECTICUT vent. Available 1n a com plete s1ze range. DRY CLEANING College View Tavern 3 Hour Service 215 Zion Street PRESSING WHILE YOU WAIT Goodall well-tai lored flan ne l GRINDERS and SANDWICHES slacks COLLEGE CLEANERS CLAMS ON THE HALF SHELL $13.50 130 I Broad Street - Hartford OUR SPECIALTY THE BOND PRESS, INC. IN A 16 OZ. HUMIDOR econd F loor, Men's lathing Printers of the Tripod lARUS & BROTH ER COMPANY Richmond, Virginia 94 Allyn Street Hartford, Conn. April 14, 1948 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Page Five Softball, Tennis, Track Rivalry Fencers Compete l.n lntramurals will Begin Soon In NCAA Matches At Annapolis, Md. Sports on Parade Race for Alumni Cup Finds Sigma Nu Leading wiilh 75 On April 2nd, the three-weapon By Dick Avitabile Pcints; Soft Bailers to Play 7-lnning Games with 2 Leagues combination of Jack Rey11old · (foil), By Bill Wetter Harry Rowney (epee), and Robert Blum (sabre) left Xew York ity to The pring Intramural Sports pro­ participate in the • "ational Collegiate gram will get under way this week qua h was this past winter. There Although Trinity's varsity baseball squad is unable to boast a victory A sociation fencing championships at following the meeting of representa­ will be a single elimination with a as n result of the rt'cent spring excursion, the team put up a good showing Annapolis. After a long aturday tives on Tuesday, April 13. Tennis, consolation match for third place. ag-ainst both Georgetown and Navy. The game with Georgetown was not steeped in fencing, the team stood track, and softball are the three There will be a date limit with three dt'cided until two were out in the last haiC of the tenth inning, when the twentieth in a field of twenty-nine. sports listed by Don Phelps to count days between each period. The hard home team pu. hed over a run to win, 7-6. The Hilltopp rs outhit their The championship wa won by C.C. toward the Alumni cup, which is court will be a signed to intramural , opponents 13 to 11 in this contest, but the victors pounded out six extra • .Y., 1vith 'avy placing .econd, The now in the possession of Sigma u, while the other courts arc a1•ailable bases among their blow , including one round tripper. Joe Julavits was individual championship in foil was last year's winner. igma Nu is also if they are not being u cd by the var- hard, and gave up scv n base on balls, while . triking out seven. Jack won by AI Axelrod of .C.i .Y. and ity. There must be 7 men on each Tnhon, Whitey Kunkiewicz, and ;.\Iarty Rouse led the Trinity attack with in first place in the race this year of the 194 Olympic quad, the cp e team, three playing singles in order three hit$ ach. with a total of 75 points. The J -Sox, by Bill Bryan of Tavy, and the sabre of their ability, and four different Jack cully hurled a three-hitter at Annapolis, but one of those three Dekes, and D lta Psi are tied for ec­ by Jim Day, of the :Kava! Academy men playing in the two doubles. The was a fir t-inning home run by al'i Goodie!, avy's right fielder. This blow, ond "ith 50 points apiece, while Delta also. winning team must take at least 3 coming with one man on ba. e, proved to be just enough, as the Sailors eked Phi i next with 35 markers. Foil and epee were fenced first; the out of 5 team matches. The final scor­ out a 2 to 1 triumph. Besides pitching n beautiful game, cully was respon­ The softball schedule has not yet fencers in each weapon (one from ing toward the Alumni cup will be the sible for two of th llilltoppers' three safeties. These gam s were both played been drawn up, but indications are each chool) were divided into two same as in softball, 15 extra points against teams, who, becaus f climatic onditions, had enjoyed a longer that the f irst game will be this Thurs­ pools of approximately fourteen ach. for the winning team, 10 for the sec­ practice period than Trinity. Last year the Jcsseemen also got off to a slow day. The plan is to have leagues, with From each pool, the top four men the first-place teams playing off for ond place team, and 5 points for the sta1·t, but, as the season grew older and the weather warmer, the victories third place club. All teams entering were to qualify for the individual the one-two spots and the second­ finals. The only bout counting incr ascd. The same ty))e of tr >nd can be xpected this year. place teams fighting it out for the are credited with ten points automat­ Well , the 19<1 lajor League baseball season will be getting under way ically. toward the team championships were third position. The games are to be tho e fenced in these preliminary early next week. Aft(•r two months of spring training in the sunny South, 7 innings this year (5 by agreement) The third sport, track, will be held round ·. the clubs have finally rounded into Rhape for the long race ahead. Although and will start at 4 p.m. on the sched­ on two separate dates, with trials in In a very tough pool, Reynolds did quite a few of the t ams look the sam!! as th y did Ia t s a on, some have uled elates. Each team must have no the sprints and hurdles the first day, well in the .foil preliminary. Ile did b en strengthened considerably. less than 9 players, nor more than 10; and the finals in these event along not qualify for the finals, but proved ln the ational League the pennanl-1 inning Brooklyn Dodgers are going they must supply an official and a with the one mile run high jump, and him elf de.finitely one of the better to have a tough time maintaining th ir championship. They will be hard scorer. in the case of a protest, a discus throw on the second day. The men in his group. Rowney did rather pressed by both th Boston Braves and St. Louis ardinals, but especially statement must be submitted in writ­ finals for the half mile run, pole poorly in his pool in the epee, and by the Brav s. Billy outhworth has a well-balanc d ball team. If the ing to the Director of Intramurals vault, shot put, and javelin will be showed the need of much more train­ pilchet·s, pal'iicularly , Wan n pahn, and Bill Voiselle, do not within 48 hours of the contest. held on the first day. ing in the weapon, which he had just disappoint, Boston should win easily. Th arclinals have passed their prime A few rules that are commonly In addition to the Alumni cup, taken up six weeks before. Blum and are definitely on the way down hill, but they may have nough left to violated were outlined by Mr. Phelps. there are three individual cups, one fared well in sabre, b ing the only bring home one more flag. Unless Ray anders is really his old self again, The must remember to have for each spo1t. Since Sigma u won Trinity man so to qualify for the fin­ and a couple of those much-heralded Dodg l ' rooki s prove to be sensational, both feet on the rubber and the ball thei1· third leg on the track cup Ia t als. Brooklyn will probably have to be content with second place. in both hands in front of him for at year, a new one will be offered this I n the evening finals, Olympic In the American League, the Red Sox and Yankees will have all the least a second before pitching the year. Sigma Nu has two legs on the squadmen AI Axelrod and Robert excitement to themselves. cw York, with I ell ,. back in action, will put ball, and he must make the delivery Godfrey M. Brimley tennis cup while Kaplan, of New York University, up a good fight, but Boston should prove too strong for them. The acquisition so that his wrist is inside his elbow. Alpha Delta Phi has one. The J-Sox, fenced for the foil championship; Ax­ of Vern Stephens and Jack Kramer plus the hiring of Joe McCarthy as man­ lo balks are called; the play must Sigma u, and Commons Club all elrod won the bout 5-2, to win with ager has made the 'ox almost a dream team. start over again with the same count have a leg on the softball cup, and a day's record of twenty wins and no Here' ou1· guess as to the actual standings of the clubs next September. as before the violation took place. The curiously enough, they finished in defeats. In epee, Bryan of avy up­ rational League: Boston Braves, Brooklyn Dodgers, St. Louis Cardinals, batter is automatically out on the that order last year. set Bowman of Army. In Sabre, Navy New York Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, incinnati Reds, , third strike despite a miscue by the The most important point brought captain Day was favored, and went Philadelphia Phillies. catcher, and a foul tip need only be out by Mr. Phelps was on the general through the finals without dropping A merican League: Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, Detroit Tigers, hit as high as the top of the batter's eligibili ty of men. All men who have a bout. Blum finished seventh in this , Philadelphia Athletics, Washington enators, Chicago head to be caught for a putout. The a medical excuse from physical edu­ event, winning but one bout of his White Sox, St. Louis Browns. final rule outlined was that a runner cation are ineligible to participate in seven. cannot leave his base until the intramurals unless they have a writ­ The finals were followed by a pitched ball gets to the batter, and ten certificate signed by their doc­ hasty medal presentation; then Trin­ that he cannot score from third un­ tor to play on their team. If a man is ity fencers Rowney and Blum joined less he is forced in by a walk or the already on a college sports squad, he with Champion Day and repaired to ball is hit in play by the batter. must have the permission of his coach a nearby bar to ease their aches. The tennis schedule is to be ar­ to play in a different intramural KEEP FUN GOING ranged in the same manner as the sport. FORDHAM UNIVERSITY Trinity AB R II avy AB R H SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK PAUSE FOR COKE Barrow , ss 4 0 0 Armstrong, 2b l 1 1 Heintz, cf 4 0 0 Searle, cf 4 0 0 Three-Year Day Course Mahon, lb 4 0 0 Goodie!, rf 3 1 1 Four-Year Evening Course Kunkiewicz, 3b 4 0 0 Frahler, If 3 0 0 CO-EDUCATIONAL Member Association of ft merican Law Schools Rouse, 2b 3 0 0 Boney, 3b 2 0 0 Accredited College Degree Required '> Leahy, r£ 3 0 1 Brendle, 1b •J 0 1 for Admission Veterans of World War JI who have com­ orcoran, If 2 1 0 Buck, ss 3 0 0 pleted two years or college work toward accredited degree may mat.riculat.c within Pitkin, c 3 0 0 Morrissey, c 3 0 0 one year or ho norable discharge. Scully, p 3 0 2 Burton, p 1 0 0 Full transcript of r ecord required in every case FJRST YEAR CLASS BEGI S Totals 30 1 3 Totals 23 2 3 In September Trinity ...... 001 000 000-1 For further information nddr Navy ...... 200 000 000-2 Registrar Fordham U. School of Law :J02 Broadway, New York 7, N . Y.

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I u•g (\\ithout. undue fanfare) the and many felicitous poetic e~:ects whkh :-:hould re.-ult in !'Omethin~ Review salient aspect~ of the book. Down Fraternity Row (Continued from page 3.) for it authenticity of carefull~ · more ideational than mo ·t reader" I will bt• able to disco1·er. Perhaps a ALPHA DELTA PHI was converted PSI ll'SJ LO.' takes pleasure in an- lt·ang< a fight. The iutct·c t value. of ob. ~>rved and "elected details, it~ :at- 1. • it- ~unple Jn·e,·iou: reading of Cyril Conolh·'s into a rest home for the aged for a nouncing that its r 'Jll'csentative for such a corn)wri~on and thu touche;; of i. f\'ing concrd c JCL!Oll, :; • . I "C'nquiet (;ra1·e" would do somethi~g few da'.'S after Easter whih• Llw . • rathl't' :-obet· alirc eau~c one to be- ela.ritv draw attention to "ClUe · ·' 1948-49 on the lnterfratermty ( oun- • • . ]fJ..jf'"1 h\' to cla1 · if~· the intent. and \'illai!<'S oi Bavaria. · • • brothers attempted to get their blood 'J'hc eome awar!' of how intcn ely ~<·rious The two pieces of fiction are "un­ cil i~ Donald P. ~laeL<•Ilan '.)0. · h 1 t f Ll h I J-:enneth IJ. Thoma:. This might be pressure

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