Cooper Recommendation on Stone Approved History Department Offers Stone Job It took the College administra- of the faculty, would limit his ef- tion over 30 hours last weekend fectiveness at the College, Stone to gain approval of the appoint- said, "it might." ment of Chuck Stone to the history "We both have to be bigger department, in spite of an unpre- people." he added. cedented faculty resolution sup- President Lockwood confirmed porting Stone's candidacy. on Monday afternoon that the faculty The joboffer was transmitted and administration members of the to Stone at 10 p.m. Sunday. Two appointments committee met sep- hours earlier President Lockwood arately Saturday and approved said he did not know if or when Stone's appointment. the appointment would be approved. The meeting with the Trustee He said, in a phone interview, members of the committee did not that the decision might not be take place until Sunday, Lockwood reached until Monday or Tuesday. said. It was still unknown Monday The offer to Stone was made afternoon if Stone would accept after a week of ail-college meet- the offer. ings, growing student pressure, Anthony Netting Chuck Stone George Cooper At the faculty meeting Saturday, and increased faculty - student George B. Cooper, chairman of solidarity on behalf of the black the department of history, spoke professor. against the creation of extra-de- partmental positions and said the appointment should be made with- Anthony G. Netting, assistant in a department, according to re- professor of history, introduced a liable sources. motion Thursday night that the Cooper then announced that he entire community meet Friday would request an associate pro- morning to determine a way of fessorship for Stone in his own bringing Chuck Stone to the College. department. Friday morning, the meeting The faculty voted 86 to 13 for voted to ask the administration to ffrittitg frtpoi the resolution requesting the ap- offer Stone a position by 4:30 pointments committee to appoint that afternoon. "an associate professor within a At a second meeting at 4:30 Vol. XLVIII, No. 30 TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD February 3,1970 department qualified to teach, ad- Netting announced that a group of vise, and consult in the fields of concerned students and faculty had urban, environmental and Black drawn up a proposal to ask for 6 studies." faculty support for a position which The Future of Our Urban Centers' Stone was not mentioned by name would enable Stone devote his time in the resolution, but administra- to urban studies and black studies | tion and faculty sources said the as a member of some department. resolution was intended as a re-, Netting asked that the 4:30 dead- Badillo Lecture Series Next Week quest for his appointment. line be extended so the faculty Herman Badillo, New York City liberal coalition of white liberals - Contacted after the faculty vote could consider the request at a lawyer and former Bronx Borough and minority voters. He is expected Saturday, Stone said he was"over- special meeting Saturday. president, will be a lecturer-in- to seek the support of this coalition whelmed" and " moved by the vote At the Saturday faculty meet- residence at the College Sunday in an upcoming campaign for Con- j^ week, gressman from the 21st district. Stone said he felt 'a "moral the department of English, present- recently completed ?Ks three lectures will obligation" to come to the College ed the proposal for Stone's posi- a four-year term as Bronx Bor- livered in the Washington Room because of the show of faith from tion. ough president, will give three at 8:30 p.m. students and some faculty. McNulty, Clyde D. McKee, act- public lectures on "The Future Monday night, Badillo will de- The black author-journalist said ing chairman of the government of Our Urban Centers." fine "The Nature of the Existing he would not commit himself to department, Edmund La B. Cher- Aside from his three lectures, Crisis." Wednesday night he will accepting the offer until he saw bonnier, chairman of the Religion he will speak in classes, visit talk on "The Prospects of Sep- its "precise components." department, and Norman Miller, with students and faculty, and meet arate and Unequal Societies," and Stone received job offers in chairman of the sociology depart- with local Puerto Rican leaders. he will finish his stay on Thurs- Washington and from Princeton and ment had all told the Friday meet- Badillo, who is of Puerto Rican day night with a lecture, "A Pro- Cornell Universities last week. ing of concerned students and descent, was President of the Bronx posal for a New Political Coali- Trinity, he said, is still his first faculty that they would make Borough of New York City from tion," choice. courses taught by Stone count to- January 1966 until the end of 1969. On Wednesday, February 11 at Asked if his publicized critic- ward the major in their depart- He is a well-known advocate of 4:00 p.m. in the Wean Lounge, Ba- isms of Robert W. Fuller, dean ments. the "New Politics," a cross-party dillo will talk informally with students. Badillo's bid for Mayor was sup- Hefman Badillo ported by The New York Times, Eugene McCarthy, Paul O'Dwyer, He told the American legion John K. Galbralth, and the Demo- that they had done a great job in cratic Keiorm Movement in the helping veterans of wars, but that Bronx, it was time now to help "veterans Badillo took a strong stand of the cities." against the Vietnam war in the Badillo told the Jews of Queens early days of his campaign. He that they had responsibilities to called for the return of the city's Negroes and Puerto Ricans. share of the war funds to fight ur- Badillo based his campaign on ban blight, the call for unity and understand- John Lindsay borrowed the Viet- ing among all New Yorkers. He nam platform for himself after said New York's great problem was Badillo was defeated. its "emotional crisis." He accused Before he was elected Borough his opponents Procaceino -and President, Badillo was the first Robert Wagnsr of appealing to Commissioner of Relocation for backlash, fear and division, New York City. Then 33, he was Badillo is an advocate of decen- the city's youngest and only Puerto tralization, not just in urban educa- Rican Commissioner. tion, but In all city services. Badillo, six feet tall (he does "Each borough should have its not like to be called a tall Puerto own Master Plan and its own Rican), was born in Cagus, Puerto budget," he said in a televised Rico. His father, an English teach- debate. er, died before his first birthday. (Continued on page 3) His mother died when he was five, at which time he came to the to live with relatives. Correction Badillo has held seats on numer- ous city and federal panels deal- The TRIPOD wishes to ing with welfare, health, housing, acknowledge an error in its Jan. crime, civil rights, youth and 28 issue. It was incorrectly education. reported that Dr. Edmund La B. What impressed political obser- Cherbonnier, professor of vers last year was his straight-i religion, said a single vote in the forwardness. "We're not talking Appointments Committee was about promises to make a model enough to defeat a candidate. Dr. city — we're taling about a liveable Cherbonnier actually said that, in city," said Badillo again and again the past, he had known of such ?®nn§s Stars at Trinity s last spring. cases and that more recently the World Championship Tennis will present top professional competition at Trinity Sunday, Feb 115 at 7 pm. Instead he talked to people of procedure had been formalized to Competing in the new Ferris Center will be professional stars Denn.s Ralston shown above) and Butch traffic, garbage, street cleaning, prevent them. and hospital care. Buchholz of the United States, Roger Taylor of England, and Nicki Pilic of Yugoslavia. February 3,1970 Page 2 TRINITY TRIPOD Hartt Opera-Theatre to Stage Hartford Stage Features 'Joe Egg9 'The Love for Three Oranges' Hartt Opera-Theater of the Uni- saved by the jester with his bucket versity of Hartford will present its of water, thus smoothing the way production of Serge Prokofieff's for the traditional happy ending. "The Love for Three Oranges" in Performances this season with by Steven Pearlstein the Goodwin Theatre of the Austin the Hartford Symphony, in New Arts Center at the College Friday London and other communities, When Peter Nichols writes of a at 8:15 p.m. have been greeted with critical * 12-year-old spastic named Joe The opera, one of this season's praise. George W. Stowe of the Egg, his purpose is not to win our touring productions for young audi- HARTFORD TIMES called it an pity for the hopelessly crippled ences, has been designed and staged "engaging show," and added that youth. Joe Egg, a play now running by Elemer Nagy. Music direction the "theatric skills employed are at the Hartford Stage Company, is by Moshe Paranov. on a high professional level." NEW is about marriage and relation- Nagy is chairman of theater arts LONDON DAY'S Raymond K, Bord- ships, and the institution of and operaat Hartt College of Music, ner described it as "a provocative monogamy. University of Hartford. He is na- production" and especially cited the Like his contemporaries Pinter, tionally recognized for his produc- costumes and set. Osborne, and Albee, Peter Nichols tions at Hartt, the Aspen Music The production features students takes two sensitive, intelligent peo- Festival and such groups as the of voice and operaat Hartt College, -r ple, and bombards them with petty Mobile and San Francisco Opera friends, a rotten job, and an over- Companies. protective mother-in-law, creep- Moshe Paranov is president of ing Socialism (in the guise of a Hartt College and University of flea spreading cat named Beatrice Hartford vice-chancellor for per- Webb) and .a spastic little girl. forming arts. He and Nagy have Christ is not there to help them worked with Hartt Opera-Theater -- he's atop the electric company for more than 25 seasons. The building as a symbol of peace to the operas for children have been seen world. And God is no help since rby more than 450,000 youngsters he is a "manic-depressive rugby throughout New England, New York football player." and New Jersey. Hartt is Aside from the tinny and out- considered a pioneer in the selec- of-place rock music used through- tion and staging of operas for out, the production is generally children. sensitive, funny, and at times very "The Love for Three Oranges," moving, Jeremiah Sullivan, as the the tale of the handsome Prince Essay Contest husband, comes on too strong in who cannot laugh because of a the first act. Charlotte Moore, his spell cast upon him by an evil The Percival Clement essay wife, has her troubles in convey- witch, has always entranced young contest is open to all juniors and ing just how she feels toward Joe audiences. Knowing that his usv- seniors for the best essays on the Egg. But they both more than make happiness will continue until he topic "The First Amendment and up for these shortcomings in National Duress." All entries must the last few minutes of the play finds "love for three organges," the Prince, with his faithful pal- be addressed to Dean Robert when fading of Joe Egg brings their Dunn, North College, Wesleyan true feelings plainly out in the open. ace jester, searches until at last he finds the oranges. From the Univ. Middletown, Conn. 06457, The play will run at Hartford third orange emerges the lovely no later than April, 12. Stage until the end of this month. Princess Ninette, whose life is CELLULOSE: To Live Bs To Hope Jeremiah Sullivan, as Brian, looks over shoulder of spastic daughter, Joe Director Ozu 'Most Japanese' Egg in this month's production of the Hartford Stage Co. Joe Egg is Written by Peter Nichols. by John Grzeskiewicz

Books To the West, the late Yasujiro cinema. The Japanese consider him need any introduction. A DAY AT Ozu (he died in December of 1963 l:o be the "most Japanese" of di- THE RACES (1937), which will be at the age of 60) appars as one rectors perhaps because Ozu deals shown Sunday at 8 p.m. again at of the more shadowy "greats" of the with that area of Japanese life Krieble, is perhaps the last of film world. He was generally un- where that people ARE at their the great, classic Marx Brothers' More About Today known in our corner of the world most Japanese — the family. His comedies. Their subsequent films, until the late fifties when his films films eschew the rapid pace of though they have their moments, " ,•:•' : by;Dsniel;,J. Zhiti-. •' •: • ' '. • ' "/ •"".'• ' began' to emerge at film festivals action melodrama for the more are generally disappointing, lack- and universities in America, tranquil tempo of his middle-class (The French Lieutenant's Woman, by John Howies. Boston: ing that surrealistic, maniacal France, and Britain. Yet Ozu had characters' lives. I recommend strain that aroused the admiration Little, Brown & Co. $7.95} , been directing distinguished films this film highly to actual and pros- and emulation of Eugene Ionesco, since 1928 and was considered by pective majors in. Non-Western the Japanes themselves to be one Studies in addition to the usual among others. A DAY AT THE,* • THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN is a very good novel. It of their greatest directors. - His overs of the beautiful and sub- RACES, however, is just as funny looks long (467 pages) but it will take you about as long to read as it first masterpiece, at least accord- lime. as MONKEY BUSINESS (1931) would take to see EASY RIDER, ALICE'S RESTAURANT, JOHN ing to AndersonandRichie's"auth~ HORSE FEATHERS (1932) and a AND MARY, and I AM CURIOUS YELLOW. Though it is about oritative" THE JAPANESE FILM, THE MUMMY (Saturday at mid- NIGHT AT THE OPERA (1930) but people who lived in 1867, it will tell you more about people arid was the 1932 silent comedy, I WAS night in Krieble) is one,of Univer- not perfect as was the case with . problems of today,, in fact more about people and their problems in BORN BUT , . . Ozu did not make sal's best productions of the thir- Leo McCarey's DUCK SOUP (1033), general, than all those movies put together. I do not intend to his first sound film until 1936,- ties. This 1932 was directed by which is the most satisfying of regrind that old anti-McLuhan axe. I merely wish to note my a fact which has generally been Karl Freund, one of the great Marx Brothers' films. A DAY AT opinion that John Fowles deals with the issue of freedom and considered to be an aspect of his directors of photography of all THE RACES has Groucho's magni- responsibility in a manner which does not suffer, which in fact gains, traditionalism though it must also time. Freund directed only one ficent foil, Margaret Dumont, play by not being, about "Now", and which tends to liberate the be remembered that the silent other memorable film, MADLOVE. the hypochondriac Mrs. Upjohn who imagination in the best tradition of any aesthetic treatment of film died more slowly in Japan (1935), before returning to cinema- places all her trust in Dr. Hacken- literature, or history, or philosophy, far more successfully than the (and ) than in Hollywood or tography. THE MUMMY is a sub- bush (Groucho Marx) who is in pop-youth culture approach to social and ethical problems currentin Paris. dued, haunting Hoffman-like tale, reality a horse doctor. In addition * the cinema. told with Freund's Germanic light- to the three Marx Brothers and Fowles' book has more relevance than the "socially concerned Ozu's ' UKIGUSA (FLOWING ing, of an Egyptian mummy (Boris Margaret Dumont, there are such .popular art" because it is art in a much more valuable sense; it has WEEDS) will be shown in Krieble Karloff) who is awakened back to familiar faces as Siegfried Rumann true point-of view, true distance, true perspective. Whether he writes on Saturday at 8 p.m. This is life and who searches . for his be- who plays Dr. Steinberg, Maureen - about the Victorian age because he could get that distance no other generally acknowledged to be one loved, a priestess whom he had sacrilegiously tried to restore to O'Sullivan as Judy Standlsh and . way, or as a way of dramatizing the need for distance in life and art of Ozu's great works and repre- Douglas Dumbrille as Morgan. Di- . is an interesting matter which any reader will want to consider. Let sentative of his mature period that life and thus for whom he had been buried alive. He comes across rected by Sam Wood, a competent .me merely note that art which liberates the imagaination is not art also includes EARLY AUTUMN Hollywood craftsman. which steals away under cover of style to another, better world, but (1961) and TOKYO STORY (1953, a young Alexandrian woman (Zita art which expands our sensibilities, broadens our ability to recognize it won a prize at the London Film Johann), who very much resembles and deal with the workings of human nature in conditions different Festival). Ozu is a kind of Japan- her, presumably a descendant of (conditions are always different) but similar to our own. And though ese Bresson, stripping away all the priestess whom he conspires Guru Seminar I am not enough of a historian to Seal with the issue, I think if you inessentials and decorations from to mummify and into whom he An introductory seminar in read the book you will be amazed b"y the sense of continuance which the craft and art of the cinema. hopes to infuse the spirit of his transcendental meditation will be Fowles developes between that age which seems so far gone and our Throughout the last three decades beloved. The opening sequence is conducted by three Yale apocalyptic present. Our great-grandfathers were born in 1867. of his life, Ozu was eliminating especially horrific but I won't ruin University students Thursday, Perhaps I should have made it very clear much earlier that THE such stand-bys as wipes, dissolves it for you by describing it. There February S, at 8 p.m. in McC'ook FRENCH LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN is explicitly about freedom, and fades, camera movements, un- are also some quite interesting Auditorium. «3uty, appearance, reality, imagination, passion and other subjects usual angle-shots. Ozu will gen- flashbacks to Ancient which Transcendental meditation, that tickle us pink today. It is unquestionably modern, even erally use few angles and few seem like the murals of a pyramid according to Maharishi Mahesh .innovative, in technique; and the author has-some very-modern takes while the angle he most come to life. Karloff's make-up Yogi, its founder and first frequently chooses Is that of the is by Jack Pierce, the same man things to say about these issues. I think he is even trying to tell us who. designed the famous face of teacher, is "a simple technique ,-something which will help us. The reason I waited till now was by eye level of people sitting on the which naturally allows the way of suggesting that you will be delighted by the number of levels Japanes floor mats, the tatami. Frankenstein in the film of the But unlike Bresson, Ozu puts great previous year. All in all an un- conscious mind to function at on which the novel operates, and the extent to which it is suggestive- usually restrained, literate and increasingly subtler levels of of just the- sort of things I discussed earlier. That is why I have emphasis on the development of thought until the source of purposely discussed it not so much as literature, but in terms of actors, obtaining from them some graceful example of the horror of the most subtle and convincing film, ,. thought, the inner Being, the whether it is worth"reading. It is probably very good literature, but it reservoir of energy ami creative : is certainly worth reading. I will loan you my copy. performances in the history of the The Marx Brothers I don't think intelligence is realized." February 3,1970 TRINITY TRIPOD Page 3 'Badillo. •• Deans Refuse t o Comply TCB Bars White Students (From P. 1) From Black Culture Class With Student Files Plan The Trinity Coalition of Blacks, met with about 20 Black students. W. Miller Brown, Instructor of Deans Robert W. Fuller, Marc graduate school recommendations in a mimeographed statement dis- Most of the students waited* in the Philosophy and chairman of the S. Salisch, and Gerald R. Marshall which they write. Fuller also sug- tributed Friday, extended its "sym- corridor outside the classroom. Lecture Committee, said that the said in separate interviews Sunday, gested that instructors reclaim pathy" to" white students who were Killens arrived at 7:15, five Lecturer-in-Residence is gener- that they could not comply with a those recommendations which are barred from the first meeting of minutes after three black students ~* ally a person who is not yet com- Senate resolution calling for the already held by the Registrar's of- College Course 102, "The had entered room 131 and shut the pletely established in his field, sealing of student records until fice or the Office of Career Coun- Dynamics of Afro-American Cul- door. Killens, flanked by four black but is well on his way. they are made open for student seling. ture. " students, entered the room. The committee also felt that inspection. According to Salisch, a student "White students can and should The course had been scheduled urban studies would be an area of Steven H. Keeney, student body records proposal is before the understand that the suppressed for room 134. interest at the college. vice-president said that if admis- Trinity College Council. Under the Black desire for a meaningful After Killens entered, Jack C. President Theodore Lockwood sions materials and copies of grad- proposal, letters of recommenda- course could not allow that this Barthwell '72 opened the door of was the Lecturer last year. He uate school recommendations can- tion would be returned to those course with a limited enrollment the room and motioned the Black talked on the role of the independent not be oppened for inspection "they who write them instead of being be dominated by white students," students remaining in the corridor liberal arts college.' may as well be destroyed." kept in the registrar's office or the TCB statement said. to enter. On Sunday, February 8, Badillo Fuller said that students' the Career Counseling Office, Sal- The TCB said that "the necessity Three Black students who will spend time with Puerto Rican records would not be opened until isch said. of the Black man to relate to his arrived later were admitted to the leaders in Hartford, discussing the question of the privacy of the Fuller and Marshall both com- culture is of greater importance" room. ways that they can better apply professors who write the recom- mented that students' records are than the need of the white students A high school seminar course ? their political pressure on the city mendations is "dealt with." already protected under a policy to "receive an understanding of the which had been scheduled for room for better schools and services. "No professor would write a on student records which the TCC Black man's culture." 131 used room 134. High school Two of Badillo's most novel recommendation of a student to proposed in October, 1968. White students registered for the students who approached room 131 platforms in the 1969 mayoral a graduate school if he knew that The policy prohibits divulgence Thursday night course were: not were told not to enter by a white campaign went unattacked by his it could be read by that student of student records to anyone out- allowed to enter the room in the student standing next to the door. opponents. twenty-four hours later." side the College community with- Life Sciences Center where the Most of the white students who One called for job training to Fuller suggested that faculty out the student's written permis- course instructor, John T. Dor- had come for the 7:00 class left focus not on the diminishing blue- members keep personal files of sion. rance Professor John O. Killens, by 7:30 p.m. collar area, but-rather to focus on white collar office and desk jobs. Badillo also called for the grad- ual phaserout. of .city property taxes, to be offset by an increase in city income tax. More Security Do It Yourself Follows Attack In Coed Dorms Low C ost La u n d ry There have been three attacks on coed students in College dormi- tories since September, according Now On Campus to Director" of Security Alfred A. Garafolo. The incidents occurred in Wheaton Dormitory on Nov. 21, ^in north Campus Dormitory on Jan. 9, and on Jan. 16 in Jackson Dormitory. Each of the attacks ;occurred on a Friday morning..at-' about 6 a.m., Garafolo said. IN CO-OPERATION WITH TRINITY COLLEGE MAC-GRAY CO. HAS INSTALLED THE NEW All outside doors in the South Campus dormitories, except the COMMERCIAL TICKET OPERATED WASHING MACHINES AND DRYERS AT THE FOLLOWING main door of the Wheaton dormi- LOCATIONS: tory, have been locked from 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. since December 1. HIGH RISE DORMITORY 7, 1969. The doors were not locked 2. CAMPUS LAUNDRY during the Christmas term review and examination periods when two 3. JACKSON BLDG. SOUTH CAMPUS "A". of the attacks occurred. The first attack occurred before the dormi- tory doors were locked. TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE BOOK STORE 25 CENTS TO WASH - 25 CENTS TO DRY. A student guard has been on guard at the Wheaton door when the other doors are locked. Karen F. Fink '73, chairman of the Women's Advisory Council, said the ideal solution would be to recruit volunteer student guards. Wheaton Hall senator Robert H. Osher '71 recommended a "com- bination of guards, keys, well- informed students, and coed floors."

Career Counseling The following companies will be recruiting on campus this Maytag Electronic Ticket week, Monday, February 2- Marine Midland Grace Trust Company Tuesday, February 3— Bankers Trust Company Bethlehem Steel Corporation Honeywell, Inc. WHITE Factory Insurance Association Wednesday, February 4- Hartford National Bank &-. WOOL COLORS Trust Co. Smith, Kline and French BRIGHT COlOitS Laboratories PERMANENT PRESS New England Mutual Life Insurance Company Whiteboro Central School Thursday, February 5- The Fidelity Bank Friday, February 6- Sikorsky Aircraft Republic Steel Heublein Inc. Any juniors or seniors interested in meeting with the representatives from these companies should come to the Career Counseling Office to sign up., - ' ,"-.•• ' February 3,1970 Page 4. TRINITY TRIPOD LETTERS to the editor

well as money for more library was a means for you to expound on other topics of your choice. books, additional dormitories, etc. In my opinion the point of your 'correction* Instead, tills college has erected letter was the RACISM (as you two monuments to vulgarity and stated it) involved in the Chuck EDITORIAL SECTION To the Editor: degeneracy. Stone affair and the RACISM all May I call attention to an inac- Susannah Heschel, '73 over this campus. However, your curacy In the January 28 issue of letter did not reacli those who the TRIPOD? On page 7, lam quoted made the decision by being placed February 3,1970 as saying that a single vote in the in Mather Hall. In effect it was call- Appointments Committee was 'fair minded' Ing the entire wUUe community enough to defeat a candidate. What racist because of the actions of I actually said was that IN THE a few men who are not members PAST I had known of such cases, To the Editor: of the student body, which body but that more recently the proce- Steven Keeney and I liave not was probably the only one to read All's Well? dure has been formalized to prevent always been on the best of terms, your letter in Mather Hall. them. but I have nothing but the greatest The most distressing result of last week's series of confrontations I would appreciate your making admiration for the alert and fair I resent being called a racist this correction In the next issue. because of the actions of some- over the Chuck Stone appointment is the complacent "all's well that minded way in which he conducted one else, and I believe your actions ends well" attitude prevalent within the community. Sincerely, our two very successful all-college E, La B. Cherbonnier meetings. concerning the white students in Whether Chuck Stone comes to Trinity or not, all will not have Department o£ Religion the Black Studies were basically ended well until the procedures that initially rejected him (and have Roy Heath racist. If enough people protested, similarly rejected others) are significantly altered. The overwhelming such action could warrant the firing 'worthless poles* o£ the teacher of that course. support given the resolution of Friday's all-college meeting should Actions such as this do nothing represent more than support for one man; it should establish a firm 'segregation' to produce racial harmony, which is mandate for fundamental change in the decision-making processes of To the Editor: wiiat I personally am looking for. the College. The construction of the two To the Editor: If you are looking for segregated columns at the corner of Broad Many have made the mistake of concluding that the favorable equality then pardon my criticism, and Vernon Streets Is a perfect (Editor's Note: The following is Robert J. Ellis '72 outcome of recent events is a tribute to the viability of the present representation of the current system and believe that the appointments procedure, the department morality of our society. While an open letter to the Trinity structure, and ultimately the system of governance itself have been millions ol people in India are Coalition oj'Blaeks.) homeless, Trinity College spends reaffirmed. It must be remembered, however, that the reversal of the $40,000 on bricks and labor to TRIPOD Stone veto clearly did not occur within the established structure. It build two totally worthless poles. To the members of the TCB: occurred only when students directly challenged the authority of those I realize that a restriction in In regards to your attempted The TRIPOD welcomes letters who made the decision, threatening to disrupt the College's functioning terms of usage was placed, on apology to some white students from all its readers. No unsigned these donated funds, but It Is pos- until their veto was removed. . ," - -,i .,•,,",.• Lt '.•'/. for regusal to allow them to attend letters ate printed. Names will be sible' to re-channel their use a class in Black Studies, I wish withold upon request. The appointments procedure has shown itself unresponsive to the through certain legal maneuvers. to express that I feel your attempt educational goals of the community. This comes as no surprise as the Trinity is in desperate need of was very noble. Rather than stick majority of the campus has been excluded from representation in the additional scholarship funds, as to the topic at hand, this "apology" appointments procedure. The "joint" committee's initial failure to hire Chuck Stone is indicative of its lack of commitment to community priorities. Its simultaneous affirmation of the need for black professors On Target and administrators and veto of Stone's appointment is an example of its reluctant attempts to cope with community demands. The appointment procedures will only be responsive to Community needs if students and • all segments of "the faculty are represented. Attaek of the Sheep People Faculty representation should not be restricted to the. department chairmen. by A Ian Marchisotto The faculty's belated response in favor of Mr. Stone may in part have been an attempt to preserve the present system, but many faculty have Rabble rousing and mob violence was a spontaneous thing. This Is This, and the other actions men- also recognized the faults of the appointments and promotions appear to have become a part of highly doubtful. What is closer to tioned Is the work of intellectual the life style of the nation. This procedure. The appointments committee's mishandling of the Stone the truth is that tiie march was corpses, whether they be students particular method of political "per- planned well In advance, The great or faculty. affair is not an isolated case. Department heads complain their suasion" made its debut at Trinity majority of the one-hundred or so The events of the last few days candidates have frequently been turned down without justification. College several years ago and since people Involved were being led prove if nothing: else that Trinity Faculty* members..within the, department complain that the absolute that time the College has been sub- around like sheep by a group of is an intellectually corrupt institu- authority of the department head in initiating recommendations often jected to various fits of emotion, people who have some romantic tion, Those willing- to employ force which are inherent in such move- notion of themselves as revolu- allows for irresponsibility on their part. and worse, those willing to sub- ments. tionary leaders, much the same as mit to it, have destroyed our claim Dr. Netting's proposal to force the appointment through somewhat The very sad fact is that this a six-year-old boy imitates his to be an academic institution. normalj legitimate channels was perhaps the best method of achieving has apparently become the only favorite cowboy hero. For many of us who are juniors the immediate ends, but should not be taken to preclude reforming means of being heard at Trinity. The all-college Meetings were and seniors, it Is too late to leave It puts many students, who are the usual fare. Under the pressure established procedures.* On the contrary, as Dr. Netting pointed out in unwilling to resort to force or the this place. For others there is introducing the resolution, it should be the first step in defining a of a one-sided presentation of the still time to look elsewhere. By threat of force but who are none- facts and well placed rhetoric, so doing, they will avoid being better method. • theless deeply concerned about the emotionalism can be a most con- dragged into an intellectual sewer. The appointment procedures are not unlike the system of governance College, at a distinct disadvantage. tagious and persuasive force. sounding label but the idea seems It leaves the College constantly Reason and intelligent thought were itself. Its workings are inscrutable, students are excluded, and its vulnerable to threats and violence to be prevalent that it is not to once again swept away. Again the be considered an academic: dis- decisions are often quite inexplicable in terms of alleged "college by those unscrupulous enough to President was the subject of in- policy." An explanation of the committee's functioning by its secretary employ these tactics. What inevit- cipline. This Is false. While such sulting behavior. a course of Instruction might be in correspondence with the Senate provides an enlightening example of ably results and what has resulted, is a loss of the kind of atmosphere The spectacle of an intelligent more open to innovation than a the College's present system of governance: "For this body to operate conducive to learning. man having to submit to a cross history or a classics course, the in the best interests of the College its deliberations must be examination by a group of no-minds individual must first master the Many of the students are appar- was appalling. vocabulary of the profession and confidential. Only its decisions can be made known. No member is ently of the opinion when they privileged to discuss its deliberations or the reasons for a specific A peculiar twist to these pro- acquaint himself thoroughly with arrive here with their high school ceedings was provided by the vot- existing knowledge in the field. decision." diplomas stuffed triumphantly ing system employed. A roll call under their belts that they have This no one seems to tiave done. As the Stone dispute has so clearly indicated, a decision-making body vote under the circumstances In addition, speakers constantly nothing more to learn. They then amounted to nothing less than in- that is not representative of the community and whose members are. proceed to demonstrate most ad- point to such places as Harvard, not directly responsible to their constituents, will not act in the "best dividual intimidation. Presumably Brown, or Stamford where urban mirably that just the reverse is however, a proceeding devoid of interests of the College". The Senate should capitalize on the in fact true. democratic pretentions has no need studies programs are In existence. momentum gained by its successful challenge of the present authority An observer of the proceedings of a secret ballot. Well, Trinity is not any of these structure and demand immediate recognition of students throughout of the last few days must have places, financially or otherwise. been alternately amused and dis- Still under the circumstances There is no reason to believe that the decision-making process. the yes vote represented only half Trinity's usual second rate shoe- gusted by what he saw. If he was the student body. impressed, it could only have been string effort in this area would with the naivete of the mass of As for the TCB, their contribu- satisfy anyone. students. tion to the entire session appears The final absurdity In this whole to have been a recitation of four affair was contained in the resolu- tion passed by those assembled in the Washington Room. It demanded trinity that the faculty grant credit for courses which are at present non- existent. Editor Business Manager f rst ls that urbM John F. Bahrenburg '72 times cursed as he attempted to -•-- ' • • • - Presumably, Mr. Stone will l>e Richard B. Thomson Jr..'71 spea*. The march to his home was SS&ff SS^ffiSj; able to offer a course In comic Published twice weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays during the academic was books for full credit, He may well year except vacations by students of Trinity College. Published at West even more illustrative. The crowd are not. have to if he wants to cater to Hartford News, Isham Road, West Hartford, Conn, was lighthearted indeed and the ,^J^« *»**«»& an Student subscription included in activities fee: others $8.50 per year of the urban plan- the tastes of some of his more Second class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut, under the act of high level of excitement which per- backers In the March 3, 1S79. vaded was rather like that of a Offices located in the basement of Mather Hall, Trinity CoUese, child positively exhilarated by the Hartford, Connecticut C6106. thought of doing something naughty. "Telephones: 246-1829 or 527-3153, ext.. 252 '" Saddest of all, however, werethe what an given a three-year contract at comments of many that the march if It relevant sors are givea «e~y«r ««traets. February 3,1970 TRINITY TRIPOD Page 5 The Crisis of the Old Order by David Green It is still too early to survey flexible force; and when the opin- sue of Chuck Stone's appointment. The Netting strategy won tre- precisely the impression left by ion of the College is on the side Thursday Night the events that fell upon Trinity In spite of the favorable response mendous support from the student of progress the Board surrenders. By the standards of Trinity Col- given to the appeal for a boycott, body: only a cynic could doubt the last week. Of course, there has With the will of history against been one obvious consequence: the lege, the turnout on Thursday even- it was immediately evident that interest aroused by the issue. When them -- as it was on the issues ing was good. More than half the the tactic had certain glaring weak- the meeting adjourned until the initiative of the student community of coeducation and curriculum re- student body was not present, but impelled the College to offer Chuck nesses. First of all, there were next morning, the movement had vision (and is in the case of a sufficient number of students not enough students at the meet- direction. It only remained for Stone an appointment to the faculty. Chuck Stone) — there is no real came to give the meeting the ele- But while that is certainly a re- ing to back up a boycott. So many the formal power structure to danger of trustee intervention. But ment of tension that is vital for students were not in the Washing- respond. markable achievement, Its historic when the faculty opposes the gen- campus politics. For the students ton Room that the strike would significance can be gauged only erally liberal policies of the ad- There Is no need to examine who were concerned enough to not have the overwhelming parti- the following events in too great in relation to what will follow its ministration, the trustees do not come the issue was operating on cipation necessary for it to be feel constrained to curb their reck- detail. The Friday morning meet- official ratification. Students have two levels. The great majority of successful. Furthermore, students ing (now attended by more than learned that it is possible and use- less and reactionary instincts. The students were interested primar- were not really ready to develop power of the trustees is dependent half the student body) clearly de- ful to kick the institution In its ily with the appointment of Stone. the issue beyond the case of Chuck monstrated that the faculty was groin; however, there is reason to upon the depth of faculty opposition Their goal was to have Chuck Stone. Had the crisis pursued a to the administration. willing to jump on the moderate doubt that the College will now re- Stone on the campus. For a much more chaotic course, they might bandwagon. They all understood organize itself in a manner that smaller minority, a desire to have reached that stage by Mon- that the students would reject the would make further assaults un- The Crisis change the traditional system of day. But when the call for a boy- Netting strategy If It did not yield necessary. Although the appoint- college governance was the moti- cott was delivered on Thursday a speedy success. Waiting anxious- ment of Chuck Stone is cause for It is for this reason that last vating force of their participation. night, the time for its application ly In the wings was the boycott celebration, the undergraduate Wednesday night found President They felt that it was not enough had not yet arrived. strategy. If the faculty did not community should temper itsself- Theodore Lockwood tongue-tied that Chuck Stone be brought to the It still remained for the appeal support Stone, the entire system satisfaction with the awareness and helpless when confronted by a College; his appointment would be to be answered. In their heart through which they exercise their that its victory is — to reverse crowd of about 250 inquisitive stu- of radical significance only if It of hearts the students wanted to power would come under attack. the cliche -- pregnant with defeat. dents. The reasons for Dr. Lock- was accomplished through a major pursue a more moderate approach; If the students were amazed by The development of this crisis wood's unimpressive performance alteration of the system. These but unless one could be effective- the support tendered to the Net- along moderate lines allowed the are partly personal. He is a man students wanted the Appointments ly suggested, it was possible that ting strategy by so many depart- formal power structure to make a with little intuitive understanding and Promotions Committee to first a boycott might be forced upon ment chairmen, it was because the strategic retreat before the student for the problems and concerns of admit a voting student delegation them. undergraduates did not realize that onslaught without surrendering its students. But apart from his per- and then reconvene the case of the faculty was Intent on saving tactical advantage. Unless the stu- sonal limitations, he was really Chuck Stone. Any other method the structure -- not Chuck Stone. dent body continues to exert pres- In a political vise. The adminis- would amount to nothing more The System's Triumph Nothing could derail the success sure, it will soon learn that it is tration had supported the appoint- than the faculty doing the student of the moderate course. The fail- ment of Chuck Stone; however, It really possible to win battles while body a favor. The moment found its spokes- ure of the TCB to rigidly denounce losing the war. had lost the case because It had The Thursday night meetingwas man. Dr. Anthony Netting, as- it amounted to tacit approval. to plead its cause without the sup- the turning point of the crisis. The sistant professor of History, rose The Heritage port of Influential faculty members student body brought to that meet- to suggest an alternative. The of the Committee on Appointments Ing their misconception of the role speech made in favor of a boycott Final Irony Since May, 1968 student power and Promotions. Thus the position of the trustees and administration had suggested coercive tactics; at Trinity has existed only in of the administration was very in the crisis. But the lively ses- and Dr. Netting played upon the threats, abstractions, and night- clear; unless the faculty would sion progressed In such a way that emotional reluctance of students The faculty assembled on Satur- manifest solid support for Chuck the students developed a more to adopt such measures, uecog- day afternoon, and the overwhelm- mares. 1969 was a long "morning Stone, his cause was lost. after" the sit-in. In one brief sensitive perception of the politi- nized as a "fellow-traveller" of ing support given to Chuck Stone There is no way to predict the cal intricacies of the Chuck Stone student causes, It was possible Indicated that Netting's middle convulsion the political energy of course had such a broad base the student body was exhausted. reaction of the student body to a case. Dr. Lockwood made a for- for him to lend his moral author- political issue. One may be fairly mal presentation that satisfied few ity to a moderate course. He was that it had smothered the die-hard - The building take-over was both reactionary element as effectively the climax and epilogue of radical certain of their sympathies: with students and then submitted to a in favor of cultivating the support the exception of a dwindling tribe question period that answered of the faculty in the hope that as it had the radical group. After action at the College. What enough of them would be per- the faculty emerged from the meet- emerged from Williams Memorial of mindless cossacks, students nothing. The performance of the have an acute understanding of President persuaded students that suaded to announce their support Ing with irrepressible grins on on the night of April 23, 1968 for Stone's appointment. The strat- their faces (they knew what had was a student community too tired right and wrong; and therefore the administration was as helpless they will most likely support the as lie appeared. And suddenly stu- egy behind Netting's proposal was really been accomplished), stu- to capitalize on its victory. And aimed at the immediate goal of dents were astonished to learn so, after wringing the pledge to victim of the "system." How- dents were directing their attention to the role of the faculty in this bringing < Chuck Stone to. Trinity. that George Cooper, the man most recruit black students from the ever, it is futile to attempt to It laid the issue into the hands of foretell the intensity of that sup- crisis. The conservative convic- identified wjth the anti-Stone administration, the students shuf- tions of the faculty members of the faculty -- where the power had clique, had Introduced the deci- fled off to sleep -- leaving the port. Although it was clear from in fact resided. In a sense, the the Wednesday night meeting in the Appointments and Promotions sive motion In Stone's behalf. No "system" in tact. strategy was too perfect. It did one can miss the subtle irony ; front of Lockwood's house' that Committee were denounced. The not ask that the system change It was demoralizing that the sit- role of the trustees was no longer wrapped within that action; but far in had fulfilled so few expecta- there was considerable emotional — only that it show mercy. support for Chuck Stone, no one the topic of discussion. The stu- more important to the students tions. Students lost all faith in is how predictable that action was. could say whether it would grow dents peered through the Board's From the more radical point of 1 political action: after all, If some-' large enough to translate itself disguise and recognized the view, the Netting strategy offered It-was the denouement of the great thing as drastic as a sit-in could into political action. An all-college faculty. few benefits. However, they could theme of last week's drama; the not change Trinity College, what meeting was called for Thursday be enjoyed only if the moderate power structure subordinating The meeting was still balanced personal pique to political objec- the hell would? For a year and a night; but one could only guess on dead center; a call for a boy- course failed. The Netting ap- half the campus remained mori- whether more than a handful of proach was so reasonable and tives. Because it was able to do cott of classes tipped it consider- so, the victory of the faculty is of bund. The spark of student action students would overcome their ably to the left. As a tactic, the moderate that If the faculty did was nearly extinguished; it was listless despondency and go to the not respond, a tight boycott would a character more permanent than strike would raise the perspec- the achievement of the students. kept alive only by fabricated is- Washington Room. tive of the crisis beyond the is- be Inevitable. sues and the secret hope of stu- dents that the opportunity to change Trinity would one day arise. De- spair was not the only reason that students were unable to rally themselves against the institu- tion's "procedures." At the root of their political dysfunction was A mn their inaccurate analysis of the realities of political life at the College. Students viewed the Board of Trustees as the axis around which all issues rotate. They all but ignored the significant func- tion of the faculty. The student body compounded its exhaustion by throwing useless punches a- gainst the shadow of power — the trustees. It is hardly the intention of this article to portray the trustees as the allies of the student body. It is quite clear that they have little sympathy for the changes that have A SftMJUR ITMOULP 1H(5 come to Trinity. But they are less important for the power they wield than for their service as the sym- bolic focal point of all grievances. They disguise the true source of conservatism. They allow the fa- culty to pursue a conservative policy with impunity. Whenever the issue of radical change arises, the faculty can declare, "We are all for it, but the trustees will never permit it." The interests of the Board in the policies of Trinity are only superficial. For most of them the College evokes memories of their youth; and the Inertia of Trinity allows them to enjoy some of the past's sweet flavor! But nostalgia is not an in- February 3,1970.. Page 6 TRINITY TRIPOD Skaters Topple Babson, Amherst But Harvard. JV's Snap Streak by Shawn O'Donnell Consecutive victories over Am- defense, shut out the Lord Jeffs. not good enough. Still, the Ban- herst and Babson early last week John Kiley and Steve Hamilton tams' courage and determination gave Trinity a winning record in scored for Trinity. Co-captain Paul never flagged despite the bleak hockey for the first time this sea- Bushueff directed the smooth line prospects as the game wore on. son. However, the Bantams dropped play and assisted Kiley on his goal. Freshman Carl Norris repelled back to four wins and four losses Goalies Sheldon Crosby and Carl forty-five of the over sixty shots when the Harvard JV's gave them Norrls kept the nets pure. taken on Trinity's goal. Norris, their worst beating of the campaign On Wednesday, Babson collapsed along with defensemen John Milli- on Saturday. The Crimson scrubs under the robust Bantam attack, ken and Spike Birmingham must initiated Trinity into the rugged 8-5. Al Landry, Scott Phillips, Cliff be credited with keeping the score world of Ivy sports by posting a McFeely, Frank Stowell and John down to a very respectable 7-2. convincing 7-2 triumph. This loss Kiley combined to amass eight Co-captains Bushueff and Stowell to the technically superior Cantabs points, the most Trinity has mus- each scored once. It may be ex- spoiled what was otherwise a most tered In any contest this year. Al- pected that future Ivy opponents will gratifying week. though the defense allowed five not be able to dispatch the Ban- The semester break ended when goals, Trinity never relinquished tams as easily as Harvard did. Coach Kay Batson's crew resumed the lead. These two victories Following this week's tourna- the season on Monday at Amherst. seemed to be fine preparation for ment at MIT, Trinity returns to the The refreshed Bantams, exhibiting a peak effort against classy Har- West Hartford Arena on February tight control on both offense and vard on Saturday. 11 to confront the next Goliath on Unfortunately, Trinity's best was the schedule: Yale. Trin Fencers Still Perfect **•*•( Trinity's unbeaten fencers made it four in a row Saturday by whip- ping previously undefeated;Dart- When you know mouth, 19-8. The Bantam swords- Dorfmouth Foiled: men face Yale tomorrow afternoon it's for keeps at New Haven. Joel Greenspan (left) in action against Dartmouth. The senior second Dartmouth, 2-0 before the All your sharing, sabre was 2-1 in the match which saw the Trinity fencers remain Trinity match, was expected to pro- all your special memories undefeated with a 19-8 win. ,'"., , . ,..,/." vide some of the season's toughest opposition, but the Bantams re- will be forever sponded handiiy. Trinity was es- symbolized by your pecially strong in foil and epee, diamond engagement ring. capturing winning margins in both If the name, Move for Coed Floors by 7-2 scores. In foil Stu Hamilton and Paul Keepsake is in the ring Delayed Until Next Year Meyendorfi each copped 3-0 scores . -. and on the tag, •with Scott Sutton 1-2. Epee saw you are assured of Jack Luxembourg take top honors A committee of the College Sen- who want them when rooms are fine quality and with a 3-0 score, while JohnGaston lasting satisfaction; ate, "formed to facilitate the distributed for next year. and Frank Anderson each won, 2-1. activation of coed floors this There is a "good possibility" In sabre team' co-eap'tairi Mar- The engagement diamond. semester, "has decided to wait until thai->-the administration will • ar- shall Garrison and Joel Greenspan is flawless,, next year to bring coeducation'to range coed floors next year, ac- each took 2-i scores, while Kevin of superb color and the dormitories. cording to Marc S. Salisch, O'Malley was 1-2. Two members of the commit- associate dean for community life. precise modem cut. tee; Robert H; • Osher' "7l and Coed floors, Salisch said, are Your Keepsake Jeweler Diane A. Clancy '71, said that a "very reasonable request so has a choice selection an Informal poll of coeds showed long as they are not required for •nearly unamimous" support for everyone." of many lovely styles. :oed floors next year. Salisch said that security was Swahili He's listed in the yellow pages Only one group of girls, third not as major a factor as some There will be a student taught loor, Jackson favored going co-ed students thought. > course in , Kiswahili (Swahili) under "Jewelers." tils semester. Miss Clancy said • . "Students- have, a • right within offered this semester. The course lose girls would "probably Just certain reasonable limits, to will be taught by Abdillahi Haji, o it on their own." choose a pattern of living that '70. An organizational meeting, Some of the girls onsecondfloor seems appropriate to their mores," will "be held at 3:00 p.m. today in .__ REGISTERED a&kson don't want coed floors, Salisch said. Cook B-31. Interested students 8 iris from 'Smith, feel no need for Salisch said he did not know should contact Mr. Haji at Box Keepsake ; with two floors of boys beneath what the reaction had been 'to 965 or 524-1767. DIAMOND RINGS lem, and Wheaton has been against President Lockwood's letter to : all along, Miss Clancy said. parents in December on the possi- Girls support coed floors, Osher bility of coed floors at the College. lid, for security reasons. He cited te nine attempted rapes of which seds were victims this school sar. An Engaging "When it was first mentioned to le TCC, eyebrows raised. But the Suggestion aquest was quite sincere. It's .rnply very important that girls ren't afraid," Osher said. , Osher said he hopes the College ill arrange coed flobrs for those

Civil Service The U.S. Civil Service Commission is offering 400 students jobs in federal agencies this summer. All interested juniors and seniors should see Robbins Winslow, Associate Dean For Educational Services, before I'eb. 28. DIAMOND RINGS Rings from $100 to $10,000. T-M Reo, A. H. Pond Company, Inc., Esi. 1892, HELFGOTT Cash—If you hdre — Credit—If it's good RICO'S PIZZA REGISTERED

JUMBO GRINDERS DIAMOND RINGS irving Trinity for 17 Years. 168 Hillside Ave. WATCH REPAIR Phone 247-4980 $8.50 Complete Overhaul Tue. - Sat. up 9 A.M. - 10 P.M. Instant Service Sun. 3 P.M. - 9 P.M. liver Free: "College Only" 40 Asylum Str Tel. 522-5441 February 3,1970 TRINITY TRIPOD Page 7 Racquetmen Split Pair With Jeffs Cagers Top Colby, 85-81 by Dick Vane The Trinity squash teams split Amherst Leaves Squad 6-4 games played on Friday against Amherst. The freshmen won their by Chuck Wright first game of the season defeat- Injuries played a crucial role turned out to be a broken nose. lone came back into the bame with ing the Jeffs 5-4 while the varsity in Trinity's weekend games against Howie Greenblatt and Ron an improvised nose brace and fell once again, this time by the Colby and Amherst. After giving Cretaro picked up the pace for the scored 16points, and the bench con- score of 7-2. The varsity record all they had in the Colby victory, Bantams. While they combined for tinued to perform outstandingly as fell to 3-4 while the freshmen with the Bantams tried desperately to 22 of Trinity's 44 first half points, Tom Sasali contributed eight their initial victory brought their get themselves going against taller they also had the tough defensive points, McGuirk five, and Al Floyd mark to 1-2. and stronger Amherst, but the assignments of guarding Dworkin four. Coach Roy Dath attributed the effort proved both frustrating and and Rhinehardt, two of the highest The pace of the game took its varsity loss to the five-week lay- futile as Trinity lost, 90-73. The scorers in Colby's history. Tom toll, however, as Greenblatt off the team had in between games. 85-81 Colby victory coupled with McGuirk relieved Pantalone and sprained his ankle with four min- "The layoff really hurt us," said the Amherst loss gives Trinity a was outstanding under the boards, utes left in the game and Trinity Dath, "because it hurt our timing 6-4 record with eleven games left preventing the Mules from taking holding a fairly comfortable lead. and as a result some of the boys to play. advantage of the injury to The Bantams held off a late Colby lost the touch and finesse so im- Colby came into the Ferris Pantalone. rush thanks to some key rebounds portant to winning squash." Athletic Center boasting a 7-4 After the bruising, deliberate by Gene Newell who also had nine The only two winners for the record against extremely tough first half which found Trinity on the points for the night. Bantams were captain Peter Camp- competition. The game started out right side of a 44-40 score, the bell in the first position and Frank as a very physical contest and second half found both teams trying Jeffs Romp, 90-73 MacGruer positioned eighth. The stayed that way throughout. At the to concentrate on strong rebounding loss, to a good Amherst team, outset high-scoring Joe Pantalone and fast breaking. The rsultwasan The Bantams were a victorious worsened an already mediocre sea- jammed his right thumb and within exciting game with little emphasis but battered team after the Colby son for the Dathmen. Next Satur- minutes he had to leave the game on finesse. Cretaro managed to get encounter, but they had no time to day the team plays, an excellent with a severe nose-bleed which Rhinehardt into foul trouble, Panta- lick their wounds. On Saturday, Williams squad at home. the squad traveled to the Amherst Behind an inspired performance fieldhouse knowing that the contest by the number nine man Peter would be another war underneath Epstein, the freshman team was Hapless Frosh Drop Two the boards, and with the injuries to Pantalone and Greenblatt and able to salvage some dignity out by Joel Strogoff of weekend encounters with Am- with Greg Shepard, the Bantams' herst. With* the^'score tied 4-4 After two games last weekend, and the frosh suffered their fifth number two rebounder having to Epstein rose to.';the occasion to the freshman basketball team is loss of the season. sit out the weekend games because win the match 3-1, clinching the still looking for its first victory The game probably would have of the flu, a super-human effort team's victory. of the season. The frosh were de- had a different outcome had it was needed. The admirable effort fell just short. Epstein's . heroics were made feated by Pawling, 66-64, and Am- not been for Trinity's poor foul herst, 84-65. shooting. For the entire game the Greenblatt, slightly limping but possible by the outstanding per- (Markovltz Photo) still faster than the average Am- formances of the middle of Coach The Trinity-Pawling game was frosh shot a mere 30% from the line, JOE PANTALONE takes a jumper one that the Bantams never should 6 for 20. In the second half, when herst guard, led Trinity to an early Dath's lineup. Gary Plagehoef, lead against the Lord Jeffs' press- Dean Hame, Kent Howard and in action early last week. The have lost. Thanks to-a tough man- Trinity-Pawling managed to take to-man full-court press, the frosh the lead, the Bantams were able to ing man-to-man defense. But with Craig Colgate won each of their courageous played two weekend the score 20-15J Amherst out- matches decisively. were able to jump out to a 2,9-22 connect on only 1 of 10 free throw contests with a broken nose and halftime lead; they continually ha- attempts. scored Trinity 14-4 in the next In probably the biggest game of five minutes largely on the court the Trinity sports season, the injured thumb, still managing to rassed the Trinity-Pawling ball- Leading scorers in this game for score 55 points in the two games. handlers andforcedtheiropponents Trinity were Nat Williams with leadership of substitute Bob Jones freshman' squash team will. be, and the cold shooting of Trinity. taking on a team which we believe to take a number of bad shots. 19 points, Joel Strogoff with 11, The second half was a completely and Ray Perkins with 10. Williams The Bantams were never to take will soon become an arch rival. the lead again, although they trailed The game, to be played next week/, TRIPOD Sports different story, however, as the was especially effective in the late Bantams' defense fell apart. stages of the game, scoring 10 only 37-34 at the end of the half. will be played against the always Pantalone attempted to rise tough Aetna Life Insurance Gomf. Sports writers for the TRIPOD Trinity-Pawling was able to score of the Bantams' final 14 points. In on a number of easy lay-ups and addition to his 19 points, Williams above his injuries but he was un- pany. This ••team, composed of "old-;, are despaiately needed. Anyone , able to shoot effectively. He was ies but goodies'1, may prove to bfe. interested; in joining the exciting held a four point lead, 60-56, with also pulled down 16 rebounds, about two.rninutes remaining in the , Against Amherst the Bantams only able to get four goals from the 'the fros.ti'Sv match, and "it •least- world- of TRIPOD' Sports may see floor, although he did manage to should keep; the boys in good healths Paub Sachner, Box 260 or game. ,; were bothered by their opponents' However, tanks to quick hoops full-court' zone press; Amherst .convert, 13, foul s.hots. Without an The varsity will host, Williams OH 278-7830. effective Pantalone, Coach Robie Saturday. ' : /, by Nat Williams, Trinity managed led at the half, 37-28, and gradually to fight back and tie the score at increased its lead throughout the Shults tried every possible com- 64-all. Finally, with a mere 10 rest of the game. Williams again .bination in a futile attempt to find seconds showing on the clock, a led the team in scoring with 21 a winning combination. Once again, Trinity-Pawling player connected points, followed by Mike McGuirk McGuirk played admirably as he on a 15-foot jump shot to win the with 14 and Perkins with 10. Once chipped in 11 points, but without game. A desperate 30-foot jump again Williams also • had a good the taller Pantalone, Trinity was shot at the buzzer by the Bantams' night off the boards, hauling in 20 dominated on the boards by the Ray Perkins failed to connect, big rebounds. Lord Jeffs, .. .,, . • .. ,; , ... foil 11,9 we talk?

REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO GIVE : SENIORS AND GRADUATES COMPLETE DETAILS ON Our representative will be on campus: ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES Tuesday/February 10 WITH THE PIONEER AND LEADING MANUFACTURER OF VTOL AIRCRAFT Please contact the placement office for an appointment. See"your College Placement Office now for an appointment on: THEJUQUITABLE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States New York, N.Y. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F SIKORSKY AIRCRAFT, Stratford, Conn. • Divisionof United Aircraft Corp. • An Equal Opportunity Employer February 3,1970 Page 8 TRINITY TRIPOD Yale SDS Demonstrates THIS WEEK Protest for ROTC End Tuesday, Feb. 3 mus in food and water intake, 6:00 p.m., F. Basketball - Yale Fifty members of the Yale Uni- SDS plans to continue their cor- 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. and sleep, and sexual behavior" by - Away versity Students for a Democratic responding protests. 7:00-10:00 p.m., Sale of Originals Dr. Peter J. Morgane, Director 8:15 p.m., V. Basketball - Ho- Society demonstrated for an im- The SDS called allowing the - Austin Arts Center of Neurological Research, Wor- bart - Away mediate termination of ROTC on ROTC to conduct the tests incon- 4:00 p.m. - Crown Investment cester Foundation for Experi- the Yale campus last Thursday ac- sistent with President Kingman League - Alumni Lounge mental Biology - McCook Audi- Saturday, Feb. 7 cording to the YALE DAILY NEWS. Br ewster' s promise to phase ROTC 4:00 p.m. - Concert Choir Re- torium The SDS'ers exchanged shouts and out of the Yale curriculum. hearsal - Garmany Hall 2:00 p.m., Scholastic Art Awards songs with ten counter-demonstra- The demonstrators presented a - Goodwin Theater, A.A.C. 4:00 p.m., TCAC - Wean Lounge Thurs., Fri., Sat., Feb. 5,6,7 tors of the Students for a Free list of demands to the Yale ad- 5:15 p.m., Christian Fellowship 2:00 p.m., V. Squash - Williams Campus. ministration, in addition to - Senate Room - Home demanding the termination of 6:30-8:30 p.m., Revitalization Hockey - MIT Invitational at 2:00 p.m., Fencing - Norwich The demonstration was held out- ROTC, the list also called for Corps - S. 49 MIT and Falrfield - Home side the building where eight Yale keeping General Electric recruit- 7:15 p.m., Instrumental Rehear- 2;00 p.m., V. Swimming - MIT students were taking aptitude tests ers off campus during the GE strike sal - Garmany Hall Thursday, Feb. 5 - Home for Army ROTC. The tests are to and the implementation of the Red 6:30 p.m., F. Basketball - Union 8:30p.m., V. Basketball - Roch- be given again on the Thursdays Circle plan of paying dining hall - Home 4:00 p.m., AAUP - Faculty Club ester - Away of the next two weeks, and the workers. 8:15 p.m., V. Basketball -Union 4:00 p.m., Concert Choir Re- 8:00 p.m., Film Series: "Uki- hearsal - Garmany Hall gusa", "The Mummy" - Cine- - Home 5;15 p.m., Christian Fellowship studio, Krieble Aud. 10:30 p.m., Campline - Chapel - Senate Rm. Wednesday, Feb. 4 4:00 p.m., Urban and Environ- Sunday, Feb.8 mental Studies Committee - Wean 12:00 Noon, The Eucharist - Lounge 10:30 a.m., The Eucharist and Chapel 6:30 p.m., OPEN HEARING Sermon, Dr. Earle Fox - Chapel 4:00 p.m., TCC - Wean Lounge Bookstore Committee - Wean 1:15 p.m., Newman Apostolate 4:00 p.m., Concert Choir Re- Lounge Mass - Alumni Lounge hearsal - Garmany Hall 7:15 p.m., Instrumental Re- 8:00p.m., Senate -WeanLounge 4:00 p.m., V. Swimming - hearsal - Garmany Hall 8:00 p.m., Film Series: "A Day Springfield - Away 7:30-9:00 p.m., Junior Advisor At the Races" - Cinestudio 7:30 p.m., Bio-Engineering Ser- Meeting - Alumni Lounge Kriebel Aud. ies "The Role of the hypot ala- 8:00 p.m., SIMS - Introductory TRINITY COLLEGE Lecture, Transcendental Medita- Monday, Feb. 9 tion by John Clarke, Grad. Stu- 4:00 p.m., Concert Choir Re- IMEWYORK dent, Yale, Douglas Grimes and hearsal - Garmany Hall AUSTIN ART Michael Chelnov, Seniors, Yale - TO 8:30 p.m., Lecturer - in - McCook Auditorium Residence Herman Badillo, "The CENTER LONDON 10:30 p.m., The Eucharist - Nature of the Existing Crisis" - Summer Vacation Chapel Washington Room FEBRUARY 3 Trips Friday, Feb. 6 Exhibits 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. Round Trip -$169 Now Filling — Small 7:15 p.m., HUlel Sabbath Ser- COLLEGE LIBRARY 7 P.M. to 10: P.M. Deposit and Payments vice - Senate Rm. The Puerto Rican and the City - Send For Free Details. 8:15 p.m., Hartt Opera Theater, Trumbull Rm. Prokofiev's LOVE FOR THREE AUSTIN ARTS CENTER Student Globe Roamers ORANGES, directed by Dr. Elemer Feb. 7-21, Scholastic Art Ex- Box 6575 Hollywood, Nagy - Goodwin Theater, A.A.C. hibit Florida 33021 Read taster, Ask the people naturally The reason why the Reading Dynamics involved in method works for so many people is because it's NATURAL. It's a method based on Evelyn Wood's studies of the patterns and characteristics of natural speed readers. This highway safety unique approach explains why the average graduate of the Wood course can read 3 to 5 times more rapidly (and some more than 10 times) with good comprehension. —about You can make this same remarkable progress. You'll learn to put to use the natural visual and mental capacities that lie dormant in the way you read now. No mechanical or artificial pacing devices are used in this course. f alee a Free Mfiaf»^es&©n This is a great skill for any student. The best way to find out what the Wood method can do for you is to come to a free introductory "mini-lesson." At this one-hour sample session, through film and lecture, you'll learn how you can get through all kinds of material quickly and efficiently and sharpen study skills. You'll learn how to read a little faster Death on the highways. on the spot. Here are the dates: At Mtna we refuse to accept it as a fact of life. We designed the first classroom driving simulator for TQN1GMT MT 7:30 high schools. We helped found the National Safety Council and the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. And our ..WEINHESDJir MIGHT JIT 7:30 engineering people are constantly helping to improve the JUIe-Seienees Ceiiier '(Rm. 138) driving records of the nation's car, truck and taxi fleets Because highway safety is everybody's job we feel a For information on the six-week Reading special obligation. Our business may be selling insurance Dynamics class to be held on the Trinity but our concern is people. ' Mtna is the kind of place where you can do good campus starting Feb. 10, call 232-4485. and make good, too. ' EVELYN WOQB SMST1TVTE Learn about jEtna. Ask for "Your Own Thing" at your Placement Office. 45 So. Main St., West Hartford, Conn. An Equal Opportunity Employer and OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE a JOBS-participating company. LI FE& CASUALTY