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MEDUSA Taps Merry Mothers' Tomorrow at 7:15 p.m. lie Day Weekend VOL. LXIV NO. 26 TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD MAY 9, 1967 DR. VOGEL TO ASSUME PRESIDENCY OF BRADFORD JR. COLLEGE IN FALL Today at 4 p.m. President Albert C. Jacobs announced to the Faculty that Dr. Robert M. Vogel, dean of the College, has been selected as the new president of Bradford Junior Col- lege in Bradford, Massachusetts. Harold L. Dorwart, chairman of the department of mathe- matics and secretary of the Faculty, has been named dean of the College for the 1967-68 aca- demic year. Vogel was the unanimous choice of the Bradford Board of Trustees to replace Miss Dor- othy M. Bell who, after 27 years as president, will retire July 1. When Dean Vogel assumes his new duties September 1 aa president of Bradford Jr. College he will be the first man to head the institution in its 131 years of existence. Vogel, who has taught and administered at the College for the past 20 years, admitted that he will leave Trinity with many regrets. He noted, however, that the chance to assume the presidency of a college which considers itself one of the best Junior colleges in the country was most attractive to him. Vogel said that he is enthusiastic about Bradford's tradition of educational innovation and believes that the flexibility of a two-year program for women pro- vides an unusual opportunity for sound experimentation. Vogel, a native of Columbus, of the program for six years. As Indiana, received his A.B. de- an adaptation of the Plan, he de- gree In 1935 from Wabash Col- veloped the Summer Engineering lege, While studying for his Mas- Laboratory In 1963. ter's degree at the University of Vogel Initiated the program to Michigan which he earned in 1940, promote teaching of Advanced he was an Instructor in English Placement courses which encour- at Adrian College. From 1940 to aged many schools to Introduce 1942, he was a member of the such courses as English, Latin Dr. Robert M. Vogel English Department and Direc- and history. He was responsible tor of Dramatics at the Univer- for establishing graduate degrees sity of Rochester. During World in the departments of classical War II he served as a lieutenant languages, economics, govern- Check-on Homophile In the U.S. Navy and took part in ment, mathematics and physics. the invasions of Normandy and During- the planning and con- Southern France, and was award- struction stages of the Austin Arts ed the Bronze Star for gallantry Center, Vogel was the College rep- Group Yields No Leads during the Invasion of Okinawa. .presentatlve to the architect. He Wednesday the NEW YORK demic community for their biased At the end of the war, Vogel has been the College liaison of- TIMES reported that the Student and inaccurate information on attended Columbia University for ficer for an urban renewal study Homophile League, which was re- homosexuality and homosexuals. work which led to his doctorate of Hartford's South End, He is a Dr. Harold L. Dorwart in education. Meanwhile, hejolned ..trustee of Klngswood School, West ing the College within a chanj|#£ cently chartered at Columbia, win He set: ftftals." to .foster discussion Hartford. seek charters at Trinity, Stam- of the subject and society's big- the Trinity faculty" in 1947 as an educational environment, tnat he otry at the University of Hart- assistant professor of English and Vogel has been an active mem- must be an able administrator. f the University of Chicago, dramatics director. In 1949 he he University of California at ford and throughout Connecticut." ber of the New Associa- The Trustees believe that Dr. According to the press release, inaugurated the first arena the- tion of Colleges and Secondary Vogel's sound experience and gen- Berkeley, the University of Con- atre in Greater Hartford. In 1951 necticut, Bucknell and the Uni- the Homophile League already Schools and served as a member uine enthusiasm for Bradford and boasts a chapter at the University he was given the added duties of evaluation teams for the ac- Its educational program augur well versity of Maryland. of Director of the Evening and creditation of colleges in New The mention of Trinity's name of Hartford and a representative for the future of the College." at the University of Connecticut. Summer Schools. In 1957 he was England. President Jacobs, in rioting the in association with the Homophile named Dean of Graduate Studies. League on the front page of the The League hopes to establish In announcing the appointment loss of Dean Vogel to Bradford, TIMES, for no known reason, rais- chapters in Connecticut at Trin- In the years he directed Trin- of Dean Vogel to the presidency said that "he has In his quiet ed a slight stir through the ad- ity, Yale, the University of Hart- ity's program of graduate studies of Bradford, alumnae of the in- understanding and extremely ef- ford and the University of Con- and the summer session, Vogel stitution were told this afternoon; ficient way handled his Important ministration and among the stu- necticut. introduced educational programs "It was agreed that the person responsibilities most effectively dent body. Talks with College which gained national recognition. Selected, .either a man or woman, Counselor George C. Higgins and and most wisely." He originated and developed the should be a distinguished educator Dean Vogel is the second mem- Chaplain Alan C. Tull revealed able to command the respect of that the practice of homosexuality Trinity Transition to College Plan, ber of the administration who, in Six Appointed which offers selected secondary a diversified faculty and to pro- the past twelve months, has been on the campus is negligible. The school students an opportunity to tect and enhance academic stan- selected as president of another' Social Evaluation data, according To Committee take college-credit courses in the dards, that he must feel the ex- college. Last year Dr. Albert E. to Higgins, confirm the lack of summer, and served as director citement and challenge of develop- incidence of homosexuality at the Holland, vice president of the Col- Senate President Keith M. Miles lege, was elected president of College. Hobart and •William Smith Col- The College Relations Office and '68 announced the appointments leges. the local news media found that to the newly-conceived sub-com- the homophile news release to the mittee to the Joint Committee on TIMES had listed the names of Educational Policy at the Senate about 40 major colleges and uni- meeting Sunday night. Two Groups versities across the country. They Mr, John R. Reitmeyer of Hart- expressed bewilderment when ask- ford will serve as the Trustees' Reconsider ed why the TIMES had singled out representative to the sub-commit- the seven colleges for mention. tee. President Albert C. Jacobs The TIMES report and a follow will represent the administration Student Lite up account which appeared in the while Dr. Edmund LaB. Cherbon- The machinery to act upon the HARTFORD TIMES brought sev- nler, chairman of. the Department r ecommendations and implications eral calls of Inquiry to the TRI- of Religion, will sit as the Faculty of the Senate's Social Evaluation, POD and to administrative of- member on the joint sub-com- scheduled to be released Thurs- ficials. A brief investigation yield- mittee. day, already has been set up and ed no knowledge of the Homophile The Senate Executive Commit- put in motion, according to Sen- League's attempt to establish a tee appointments are Stuart E. ate President Keith M. Miles '68. charter at the College. Edelman '68, Dennis H. Farber Two committees have been In a press release sent to the •68, and Carl .E. Luty '69. The formed which will examine the TRIPOD from Columbia, the Hom- student representatives, Miles evaluation and Its implications, ophile League claimed that Mr. said, were selected as a cross- submitting recommendations of David Cramer of Hartford was section of the academic community action to the Faculty and Senate. chairman of the underground lo- and for their individual worthi- The Student Life Committee, head- cal branch. However, inquiries by ness and interest in the sub-com- ed by Dean of Students Roy Heath, the TRIPOD and the Hartford mittee. Miles noted that the Ex- has been studying advance copies ecutive Committee received over of the Evaluation for. several papers yielded no results. As the weeks. The Committee, composed Columbia Homophile chairman op- 80 applications for student mem- bership. of faculty and administration mem- erates under the pseudonym of bers and four students, is working Stephen Donaldson, It was assum- The conception of the sub-com- in an analysis of all aspects of ed that, if he exists, the Hart- mittee by the parent Joint Com- student life at the College. The ford League chairman too works mittee was provoked several weeks Committee hopes to find ways incognito. ago by a statement of Senate in- to further develop the life of the The League exists principally terest in formal participation on individual student at the College. to foster understanding of homo- faculty committee. The Joint Its analysis, centered around the sexuality and to work for the im- Committee, composed of faculty, findings of the Evaluation, is di- provement of the laws pertaining administration, and Trustees, re- rected toward the goal of more to the practice of homosexuality. sponded with the creation of the PAUL DUVIVIER '68 scrutinizes the rationale of the petition In the .Homophile press release, sub-committee as a direct chan- {Continued on .Page 9T> Cramer scored the public and aca- nel for four-way communications. to halt bombing in Vietnam. Did he sign? MAY 9, 1967 PAGE THE TRINITY TRIPOD Jesters Schedule Musical Interlude "THE BOY FRIEND," a delight- Melanie Jones of Bulkeley High ful spoof of British musicals of the School and three students from the •twenties, will be the Trinity Col- Hartford Ballet Company, Patricia lege Jesters' spring show. Churchill, Madeline Bombetto and Performances will be at 8.-15 Diane Fleming. p.m. in the Goodwin Theater, to- Both the musical direction and morrow through Sunday. The Fri- choreography are being done by day night performance is for the Kevin Daly, a senior who plans benefit of the scholarship fund to continue in the musical comedy of the Trinity Club of Hartford. field after graduation. Sunday's performance is a matin- The set has been designed by ee at 2:30 p.m. Michael Duffy of the Hartford Art In the romantic setting of the School. French Riviera, Sandy Wilson has George E. Nichols III, Associate spun a highly improbable plot about Professor of Drama and Director a rich young Englishman disguised of the Austin Arts Center, will as a messenger boy who falls in direct. . love at first sight with a rich English girl attending a highly select finishing school for young Glee Club Will ladles. After a high-spirited evening Celebrate 95th punctuated by gleeful songs and The Trinity College Glee Club some swinging Charleston, the will present "A 95th Anniversary " chaps" get the" flappers" and pre- Concert" - celebrating its history sumably everyone lives happily as the oldest existing singing group; THE BOYFRIENDS and their girls during a Jesters rehearsal: (Front line, L. to R.) Patty Chur- ever after. of the College - on Tuesday, May chill, Diane Flemming. Madeline Bombetto, Melanie Jones and Terri Willis. (Back row) Director When the BOY, FRIEND opened 16 at 8;30 p.m. in the Goodwin George E. Nichols III, Les Rumsey, Gayle Richie, Bob Franks, Scott Sutton and Jay Shinfeld. in New York it was hailed as an Theater. evening of "sheer and unadulter- This concert will also mark the ated" delight. It played to capa- end of Dr. Clarence H. Barber's city houses for two years, giving 14 year tenure as the club's direc- play-goers their first opportunity tor. Many of the varied songs that 'Man For All Seasons' Features to see Julie Andrews In one of Dr. Barber has brought to the Glee the lead roles. Club will be heard at the concert. Ten local girls will be appear- Some of them are American pre- Scofield in Cinematic Adaptation ing in the Jesters'production. Rena mieres and songs written espe- Landers of Hartford College Is cially for the group. These include by Steve Bauer dlnal Wolsey dies ends with a. man can be credited with much, playing Polly. Krystyn1 -Hanson, William Russell Bennett's WOM- When a film receives the ad- marvelous slant shot of the Duke that is good in the film. He can known for a number of leading roles EN, WAR AND WINE; Martha Al- vance publicity and critical ac- of Norfolk, in which the balance also be held responsible for the she played in musicals at Conard ter's Pennsylvania Dutch Songs, claim which A MAN FOR ALL of the shot is achieved through weak parts. In some crucial scenes High School, is Mme. Dubonnet, COUNTRY SALE; Marc Antoine SEASONS has received, a subtle an unbalance in the shutting of a just a small alteration would have headmistress of the Villa Caprice. Charpentier's DARKNESS CAME pressure is exerted not only upon door. shifted the emphasis to something Sharon Fentiman of East Hartford OVER EARTH and Liszt's MIHI the moviegoer, but also upon the The screenplay written by Rob- more acceptable. Yet he holds his appears as Hortense and Jill Bob- .AUTEM ADHERERE. picture itself. Winner oftheN.Y. ert Bolt, author of the play, is a characters well, unfolds their per- row, of Oxford School, is Lady Director of the Glee Club from Critics Award for "Picture of the minor. miracle. Incisive, witty, sonalities subtlely and at times Brockhurst. 1930 to 1953, Professor of Music Year," and similarly cited by the and above all, intelligent, it has brilliantly, never loosening his The schoolgirls are played by Clarence E. Watters will be one Motion Picture Academy, the film sustained the same sense of bril- control to a point where the film Terri Willis of Oxford School, of two guest conductors for the liance, the same depth of investi- stagnates, , , / , , currently splaying at the Strand r Gayle Ritchie of Mount St. Joseph, program. does "-not fulfill • tne tantalizing gation so characteristic of the The drama, of More'moves pri- promise which its burdensome me- play, However, many of the most marily on the personal plane of 9 dallions denote. In a way the film important nines dealing with psy- More dealing with himself and with has to prove itself and somehow chology and sensitivity of insight, his family. Yet the movie is cur- 'Stage Presents Lively, falls Just short. given to the character of the Com- iously sterile emotionally. It 9 A lMAN FOR ALL SEASONS Is mon Man on stage, were omitted avoids the intimacy so much a a consistently good film, tinged in the screenplay because of the part of the play. Dynamic scenes Sentimental Tantastiks artificiality the character would of confrontation lack the emotional with moments of greatness. But by Christopher Lees mature. it is not in all truth a great have created on film. They are jolt that leaves a watcher breath- The Girl (Judy McCauley) is a film. Too many of the scenes sorely missed. less and weak. With the pace, color and wit of pert, sweet apple-pie Junior Miss. have been seen before; too many An historical drama, the film Throughout, the movie is taste- a first-rate cabaret revue, THE She is played with just the right of the cinematic devices have be- traces the swift rise and meteoric fully impeccable. At no time is the FANTASTICKS opened at the Hart- note of surprised sincerity and come cinematic cliches. A movie- fall of Sir Thomas More, and his lure of spectacle sacrificed for the ford Stage Company on Friday imaginative innocence. She is the goer can become tired of reflec- ultimate destruction due to moral demands of script or an over- night. This production, under Peter type of delicious pink and golden tions : In :the ripples of a lake and religious^ principles that con- shadowing of the principle theme. Hunt's slick and sure direction, is sixteen-year-old with whom prep and aesthetic shots of geese and ' flicted with those of Henry VIII. The costumes" and sets never be- ~ a lively mixture of Irony and sen- schoolboys fall In love before the birds. Yet there are moments of The fabric which Bolt weaves is come gaudy or overbearing. timentality - and a qualified suc- cess. end of the first act. startling originality and percep- one of incredible brilliance and Through.them the mood Is estab- " But when you get right down tivity, The scene in which Car- richness. Against a background of lished and sustained. Boy meets Girl. The plot Is to it, she's only the girl next English pageantry, we catch pan- A MAN FOR1 ALL SEASONS charmingly predictable. But the oramas , of corruption, without door," decides the clean-cut, is far above the average film. central irony In this mock-ro- mock-heroic but quite ordinary losing sight of the intense per- It has moments of greatness in mance is that the boy and girl, New American sonalness of it all. Boy (Gary Krawford). On this tiny which the gap created by the film convinced that their fathers hate thread hangs the story. Cinema Choice Paul Scofield In the title role technique is jumped. But at other each other and want to keep them The Girl's Father (Bob Gaus), Is truly a "man for all seasons." times, the brilliance of Bolt's apart, are determined to be to- a dapper button merchant, and the He can be morose, taciturn emo- script becpmes tiresome pedantry gether - until they find out that tional, subtle, while always retain- Boy's Father (Gene Gross) pre- Mere Tonight when not imbued with the excite- it was all planned by the fathers, tend they are having a feud and ing that polish and reserve that ment and dynamism of a live perr who are actually the best of friends. make him one of the outstanding formance. Perhaps A MAN FOR build a Wall, which, in the Py- Experimental film director Once parted, the lovers lose rimus and Thisbe style of the Gregory - Markopoulos will show actors of the English-speaking ALL SEASONS Is the best picture their innocence and "find disil- and discuss his new work HIM- world. Cromwell, More's major of the year. But somehow I doubt Show, is played by a clown. Only lusionment, and they come back In this version he is mute. -, SE.L? AS HERSELF tonight at 8:30 nemesis, Is given a striking por- it. to each other less giddy and more 'in the McCook Auditorium. trayal of sinister endomorphy by /There is a beautifully staged Markopoulos and Stan Brakhage, Leo McKern. , as Hen- mock-abduction scene, designed to •who visited the College recently, ry VIII, is suitably regal and test the heroics of the Boy and are both representative of the pompous without sacrificing the cement the lovers' union. The older generation of film makers early king's youth and careless- Narrator of the show (Tom Ur- allied with the New American Cin- ness, which contrast beautifully icli) plays the part of a bandit ema. with More's subtleness. and there is some clever spoof- Markopoulos, however, is dis- Nigel Davenport mixes nobility ing by the Shakespearian Actor tinguished from Brakhage in his with stupidity and reaches a prag- (Henry Thomas)andbrilliant mime concern for narrative and plot as matic synthesis as Norfolk, in a by The Man Who Dies (John Bot- the main structural elements of portrayal which is not without its toms). This part of the show - the his films. HIMSELF AS HERSELF, moments of ingenuousness and pa- Rape Ballet - is very funny in- which was completed recently, has thos. As More's daughter and wife, deed. its roots in the legends of Hermes Wendy Hiller and Susanna York The play slightly marred by ,and Aphrodite. are adequate. Orson Welles is some moralizing doggerel in the , The most famous of the direc- superb in the small part of Wol- second act, and the return to sen- tor's several films is TWICE A sey; stubborn, dogmatic, too old timental romance at the end. The MAN, which won the Third Inter- to_ give in, yet too intelligent to platitude that maturity is the ac- ;.:•• national Experimental Film Com- expect the acquiescence of More. ceptance of disillusionment emer- petition in Belgium in 1964. The direction of Fred Zimmer- ges as the theme, and the lovers presumably live happily and sen- Published weekly on Tuesdays during tne academic ye'nr exrept sibly ever after. vacations by students of Trinity College. Published at West Hartford Despite the ironic style of pre- New* Iaham Road, West Hartford, Conn. sentation, the clowning and the Student subscription Included |rr activities fee: others $6.50 i>i>r yew. Second class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut, under the act wit, this is a deeply romantic of March 3, 1879. SIR THOMAS More, played by Paul Scofield, confers with which finally returns to senti- Office* located In the basement of Mather Hall, Trinity College, mentality. But it is better es- Hartford, Conn., 06106. Card.nal Wolsey (Orson Welles) in "" currently playing at the Strand downtown. capist theater than the tired stu- Telephone: 246-1829 or 527-3153, ext. 252 dent is likely to find elsewhere. MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 3 College's First History 'Warmth, Charm' Describe 'Intellectually Exciting NelgQn ^ QJJ . by Geoffrey R. lished in conjunction with Trin- ie Paintillg 4- ity's 150th anniversary in 1973, White is a representational art- So when I look at Nelson White's After 144 years Trinity College will bring the story up-to-date. by Carlo Forzani has published its definitive his- ist, his style largely a sophis- paintings I try to forget analy- Professor Weaver's writing is As I viewed the Nelson White ticated extention of nineteenth cen- sis for awhile. It almost gives tory in a publishing event of great a mixture of fact, anecdote, and •] note, not only for alumni and exhibit in the Weidner Gallery of tury landscape painting, but his one a feeling of guilt to dissect humor which carries the reader the Austin Arts Center I overheard work often resembles thatof paint- them; these paintings were made friends of the College, but also from page to page and chapter to for all those interested in a fas- two people critically appraising the ers just prior to the Post impres- to appreciate as a whole, not as chapter fluidly. One is bothered paintings. The conversation ini- sionists. The delightful opaic water study examples for art textbooks. cinating story of the slow painful at times by labored prose passages growth, failures, and successes of tiated .a personal critical examin- colors of Venice follow the path of Nelson White has succeeded and long lists of names and fig- ation of my own. The collection J.M.W. Turner, and the blue paper • what is now one of the finest in- ures, but they do not detract from magnificently In capturing the flav- : stitutions of higher learning.. is composed of twenty-eight oils, is a familiar Turner device. Many or of charm and warmth of the the real genius of the book—Wea- waters, and gouaches including of his oils, especially the large Italian countryside, and this Is what ; When planning this history over ver's ability to convey a sense of several drawings, all are land- 30x40 MILL AT ROVEZZANO, is special about his work. His seven years ago, the College seem- tension and suspense to the most scapes and sea scenes of the reminded one of the conservative paintings are fresh and vivacious, i ingly turned to the right man when undramatlc of events. Even though Italian countryside. impressionism. they contain and transmit the spir- ; it asked Professor Glen Weaver White employs a multitude of it that is Italy. As I looked at of the History Department to tackle short, broken brush strokes, and each scene I couldn't help for- the mammoth task. Professor uses a light palate of bright col- getting where I was and finding Weaver, who joined the faculty in ors, excluding many of the darker myself back in Italy, feeling the 1957, is one of America's fore- hues, creating an over all diffuse quaint charm of the country one most experts on Colonial America lighting pattern familiar to im- usually has to experience to know. and the history of the American pressionism. The effect is one of Nelson White has technical com- Church, and used this knowledge a momentary, scintillating quality^ petence, but, more important, he well in his steady five-year task. of light rather than the perman- is a sensitive artist. He seems to The result is a beautiful 360 page ance of the careful outline of fo- have a natural sense of composi- volume, aesthetically pleasing and cused light. Many of White's beach tion and balance which imparts on intellectually exciting. scenes seem to take inspiration his work a rare degree of charm One of the initial efforts of the from Boudin, a direct forerunner and poise. His communication of Trinity College Press, THE HIS- of impressionism. . air and light is delightfully effec- TORY catches one's eye immedi- But 1 don't like analysis much, tive and he blends his colors es- ately with an attractive cover made and I decided to save it for an- pecially well, achieving an ether- up of lithographs picturing the other time. Sometimes I feel that lally soft tone. His handling of' Chapel and Long Walk. Over 130 we are so concerned with taking sea, air, and light in BEACH AT illustrations are found within the everything apart these days we FIUMETTO is superb and subtly pages including an exquisite full- forget to put things back togeth- wonderful. color portrait of College founder er again. We seem to forget Nelson White Is a refreshing-re- Thomas Church Brownell as a that the pieces we leave spite from the myriad of con- frontispiece. scattered around were intended to fused, rambling art which has Particularly interesting is a vol- make up a whole, and too often caught the_modern eye and which uminous footnote section of some MILL AT ROVEZZANO is the title of this 30" x 40" oil paint- we proceed on hastily to the next seeks to claim title to significance. 42 pages that not only fully docu- dissection. Someday we may look He makes you feel good. Let's ments the facts in the text, but ing by Nelson White which is currently on display in the V/eid- back and wonder where the things leave It at that and enjoy him. can also serve as a fine bibliog- ner Gallery of the Austin Arts Center. (Forzani Photo) we created and once en.ioyed went. (Continued on Page 4) raphy for further research. Com- the College's history is filled with pleting the volume is a very ade- crucial decisions and important quate index. turning points, some of its years The text itself carries the his- were relatively uneventful, and tory of the College from the futile it is concerning these times that attempts to found a Connecticut the authors imaginative peri saves RIVOLI Episcopal school in the early the reader from what could be 1800's to the period of great boring passages. THEATER prosperity under Dr. Ogleby in One of . a. writing historian's the 1930's. Tolume H, to" be pub- most important tasks is to bring his characters alive, and Profes- sor Weaver shines in this cate- ^Priorities Set gory. All of the Presidents are portrayed as individuals. Particu- larly graphic are his pictures of I In Austin Use Abner Jackson and George Wil- liamson Smith--two of the more "Beginning in 1968-69 priority successful presidents. These men in the use of the Austin Arts and others made decisions that Center, and particularly of the Goodwin Theatre will be given to : events that are relevant to.the AMERICAN arts at Trinity College," stated Campo, Naylor George E. Nichols III, last Thurs- day in a statement to department Host Educators PREMIERE OF and committee chairmen. Nichols, director of the Austin Mr. Robert Seraphino. director "LOVING COUPLES" Arts Center, explained in his let- of foreign languages for the city of The touch o£ loyJJ_ yi tjie Swedish drama, "Loving Couples" now ter that a primary reason for the New Haven, addressed the New at the. , . .(CRlyOU^ Theatre. The Prominent film was building of the Arts Center was England chapter of American As- SPARKED BY directed by Mai Zetterling, famed international aetrsss. MAT 2A to "accommodate an expanding arts sociation of Teachers of Italian at program," and to aid arts educa- their annual meeting at the Col- tion at the College. He went on lege Saturday. MAI ZETTERLING to explain that the Goodwin The- In his speech to the group Sat- CAST atre was not "intended as an all- urday afternoon, Seraphino spoke APPEARANCE purpose auditorium, but as a the- of the various newly-developed Agda HARRIET ANDERSSON atre to house the performing arts testing materials. These mater- Mai Zetterling, the Swedish acting and events relevant to them." ials, he noted, have become a great star, who has turned movie director, Adele GUNNEL LINDBLOM Nichols said that these ideals aid in admissions and placement arrived in New York for promotional were not strictly followed in the work. activities in connection with the Angela >.,-.- :....:•....:..: :. GIO PETRE first two years. He has tried, The teachers of Italian were American premiere of "Loving Petra •.:.•.,:.: .ANITA BJORK however, to accommodate all re- hosted by Dr. Michael R. Campo, Couples," the first film under her quests for use the theatre because professor of Modern Languages direction, which opened recently. Dr. Jacob Lewin . GUNNAR BJORNSTRAND it "provided a handsome envir- and chairman of the Cesare Bar- The film, a John Nasht presenta- Mrs. Lewin ...; ; INGA LANDGRE onment" and especially because blerl Center of Italian Studies, tion distributed by Prominent Films, he "wished the campus to become and by Dr. Louis H. Naylor, former was produced in Sweden and stars Srellan ..•...:.•.. JAN MALMSJO well acquainted • with the Center." chairman of the Department of Harriet Andersson and Eva Dahl- The campus often indicates that Modern Languages. beck. Her appearance at the opening Ola Landborg FRANK SUNDSTROM added an exciting inspiration to a the center is not fostering The Mrs. Landborg EVA DAHIBECK Arts, Nichols felt, if there is not glowing premiere. one or more weekly events sched- MANY FINE TEACHING "Night Games," the second film to Bernhard Landborg HEINZ HOPF uled in Austin. "The contrary is AND ADMINISTRATIVE be directed by Miss Zetterfinp;, was Thomas , Hans Sfroaf true," he added. The Center is POSITIONS AVAILABLE well-received at the current Venice constantly being used for mus- Film Festival by critics and judges. Tord .. . .: Bengt Brtrnikog ical and play rehearsals and per- ® The public was barred from viewing Public, Private and College the film by Festival officials, who Mr. Macson Toivo Pawlo formances, Nichols explained, and thought it too daring. in addition there are an increas- Mrs. Macson ,, . Margir Carlqvist ing number of film series and stu- Register now for early placement The movie is based on Mis^s Zetter- : dent produced events that request 9 ling's own first novel, which will be Peter . ,, Jan-Erik Lindqvist scheduling. The Cary Teachers' Agency published here in November by Lilian :.: Barbro Hiort Af Ornas Nichols emphasized that with the Coward-McCann. ::. Of Hartford, Conn. Alexandra Marta Dorff large number of non-arts activities "Loving Couples" deals with dis- at the Center the burden on his 49 Pearl St., Office 711 integrating moral standards in Swe- Bess : Lissi Aiandh staff is acute and that re-staff- Tel. (203) 525-2133 den and lowering social barriers ing is necessary in spite of the Member: National Association of around the time of World War I. student help that he has acquired in the past. Teachers' Agencies MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Participants Selected Miller, Brown to Cooperate For Summer Institute \n ]\ew Philosophy Course Thirty-six participants for the • vThlrty-slx participant* for tte ^•^•••J^Tflj Student.WllHont«s shoulshould havhave a gooeood acac-- to exploiexploitt profitablprofitable overlapover s be- NDEA Summer Institute in Eng- The Departments of Philosophy and Physics jointly announced last quaintance with science, but no tween departments. lish have been selected from 366 special scientific background will The Philosophy of Science will applicants, it was announced by week the creation of a new inter- departmental course, Philosophy be necessary. Although intended be the second course of its kind Institute Director James W. Gard- for upperclassmen, the course is initiated at the College. A combin- ner, Jr. In a recent letter Dr. 301. The course, entitled "The Philosophy of Science", will be of- not meant for majors only, but ation Philosophy-English Course, Donald Tuttle, director of allNDEA rather will seek to attract a wide Institutes in the United States, fered for the first time next sem- The Philosophy of Language, is ester. variety of interested students. presently being taught by Dr. Ri- praised the College Institute as Aimed at attaining maximum flex- being "one of the most imaginative Through a careful study of se- chard Lee, assistent Professor of lected episodes in the history of ibility, the course will incorporate Philosophy, and Dr. Robert D. and promising of some 400 NDEA both lectures and seminars and will Institutes in ail subject areas to science, the course will seek to Foulke, associate professor of formulate some of the basic struc- encourage a high degree of stu- english. The course has attempted be conducted this summer." dent participation. Also announced this week was tural and methodological features to draw together literary criticism the appointment of Mrs. Lois Ro- of science, such as the nature of Assistant Professor of Physics and the philosophy of language. The denhuis of the University of Cali- explanation, laws, theories, con- Charles Miller and Instructor of course will also be offered next fornia at Berkeley as secretary firmation and models. The case Philosophy W. Miller Brown, rep- semester with improved approach- and administrative assistant for histories will be chosen from resenting their respective depart- es and a new framework. More . the 1967 Institute. Mrs. Rosen- among such topics as the alter- ments, will teach the course. They work in this area is also anti- huis, who worked for three years native theories of light and matter, see its initiation as the beginning cipated. It received good student the concepts of space and time, of growing inter-departmental response and has been reasonably at the Center for the Study of James W. Gardner, Jr. Higher Education at Berkeley, is and the development of molecular relations. Such courses will seek successful the departments report. assisting Gardner in drawing up A statistical analysis of the biology. Emphasis will be placed plans for a year-long institute for applicants for the summer ses- upon periods of transition in scien- the 1968-69 academic year. sion revealed that 92 were ad- tific thought. The course will con- Hoytfs Talk to Illuminate The proposed institute, if funded, ministrators or teachers with ad- clude with a brief study of the will begin with a seven week ministrative responsibilities. sociology of science and the rel- summer session, Gardner explain- There were 263 who were employed evence of its findings to scientific Future Big- Brother Plan ed. Approximately fifteen of the by public school systems, 84 by research and philosophic inquiry. proposed forty participants will private church-related schools, Prerequisites will be Philosophy William C. Mason '69, campus The designers of the program continue part-time training during and 14 by non-church-related pri- 201 or two half-year courses in sponsor of the proposed Big Broth- believe that involvement in the pro- the regular academic year, he vate institutions. Applications Philosophy and at least one half- er program at the Windsor gram willbebenficial to the college said, • were received from residents in year course in natural science. The Elementary School, has announced participant in that he will have the Gardner pointed out that, among a total of 42 states. There were purpose of the course will be to a lecture to be given by Mr. J. opportunity to work with psychol- the thirty-six participants this 139 candidates who held Bachelors explore the sociological and phil- Hoyt, the Windsor principal, at ogists, social workers, teachers, summer, there will be two state degrees, 212 Masters, and two osophical aspects of science 3:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Senate through the study of case histories school principals, and all persons supervisors of English, the Chair- Ph.D's. With 189 male and 172 Room. involved with the boy. Hoyt stress- man of the Department of English female applicants, the ages ranged rather than the teaching of tech- nological aspects of the subject. es the seriousness of the students for all public schools in Washing- from 20 to 67. The program would aid young- obligation. Any irregularity in the ton, D.C., and 20 department local sters from 8 to 11 years of age relationship with the child would chairmen. who for various reasons lack prop- precipitate a retrogression in the The Institute director praised er male guidance. Hoyt feels that child's trust of his mentors, he • the selection committee for doing Potter to Stage Recitation a close relationship with a re- points out. "an excellent job in providing the sponsible and concerned student Mason asks that all interested . Trinity Institute with thirty-six could help fill the void in their students attend the meeting on to- highly qualified and influential Of Greek Play at Chapel lives and provide the guidance morrow, contact him through Box teachers and administrators." The these boys so badly need. 1096, or call at Jones Hall 309. members of the selection com- A special reading of SAMSON reading will be Martin H. Wil- mittee were: Dr. J. BardMcNulty, AGONISTES will be performed by liams '70, Hugh M. Elder '70, Chairman of the Department of members of the College community Professor Walter Leavit, Miss English; Professor of Education Sunday May 21 in the Funston Betty Paine, John A. Weeks '68, COLLEGE VIEW SERVICE Alexander A,, MacKimmle, 'Assoc- Garden. The time of the event will Chaplain Alan, Tull, and Christo- iate Professor of English Paul be announced this week. pher Lees "70. ' 360 New Britain Ave. ! Smith; Dr. Robert D. FoUlk'e,:alsp The program, which is being SAMSON AGONISTES is Milton's [Just West of Summit St. Gate) of the. English 'Department; and produced by Associate Professor adaptation of. the, Old Testament Dr. Joan Kerelejca. He said that, of English James L. Potter, rep- story of Samson and Delilah. It Offering Mobil Products excluding the two state super-' manifests the theme of God's prov- resents an effort to make a tra- Complete Automotive Service .visors,: those participating di- -, dition out of using the Garden each idence by tracing Samson's spir- rectedwork in English for over Spring for a dramatic reading. itual regeneration. The part of Free Pickup & Delivery Service 20,000 students. Samson is played by William and The idea was first suggested last costumer Gardner reports that the 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. Weekday* • 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sundays year by Chaplain Alan C. Tull and actor has not yet consented to College History Mr. James W. Gardner, assistant having his hair shorn before the 249-3212 (Continued from Page 3) professor of English. Associate audience. greatly affect the L-oiiege today, Professor of English John Dando, Musical interludes for the pro- and any understanding of the pre- Mrs. Amelia Sllvestri of the News gram will be performed by a small sent situation depends upon.a thor- Bureau; and President'Albert C. , ensemble composed of members ough knowledge of the past. THE Jacobs participated in a reading of the Concert Band. They will Should you drink beer HISTORY OF TRINITY COLLEGE of T.S. Eliot's "Four Quartets" perform under the direction of fills this need well by document- for four voices last spring. Baird Hastings of the Fine Arts ing such crucial questions that Participating in this year's Department. had to be ans-wered as " How sec- straight from the bottle? tarian should Trinity be?" "How big should It grow?" "Should it If you're on a fishing trip or become a university?" "Should it As soon as you get your date call the be local or national?" and most something, carrying along a importantly, "How should it be glass is: pretty clumsy. But financed?" About half of the book is devoted MOTEL. when it's convenient, we think to the administrations and their it's a shame not to use one. problems, but the other half fo- NEWINQTON, CONNECTICUT cuses on the student body. Those Keeping Budweiser inside the bottle or who are disturbed bv the unrest Catering To The Trinity Man can is missing half the fun. of today's youth would find these passages quite enlightening. Not Those tiny bubbles getting organized only were petitions signed and call 666-3301 at the top of your glass have a lot to do boycotts held in the 1800's (re- sulting In the resignation of at with taste and aroma. Most beers have least one President), but riots carbonation pumped in mechanically. and vandalism were fairly,com- Not Budweiser. We go to a barrel of monplace. Accounts are also given of the formation and death of trouble and expense to let Budweiser countless student groups and clubs, TRINITY CAMPUS LAUNDRY create its own bubbles with the natural some so secret that no one knew if they really existed. College carbonation of Beechwood Ageing. So traditions are given much space, This Weed you really can't blame us for wanting and though some ended because It LA N K E TS of their danger to life and limb, you to get it at its best, can you? one wishes that others like the e One Day S«rvie« Just for fun, pour your next four or presentation of the Lemon-Squeez- five bottles of Bud® into a glass. If you er could be relnstituted. « Complete Laundry m4 Dry Cleaning Services The photographs of the Chapel don't agree that the extra taste, clarity pew ends should have been made larger so that detail could be « Expert Tailoring and aroma make a big difference, go seen, and the lengthy intra-Church back to the bottle. history might have been cut down Easement Cook A a little, but these are only minor We won't, say another word. criticisms. Professor Weaver has All But The Linen Service Will Be written a complete and colorful account of a proud institution, and Open On Saturday 9:30-1:00 Budweiser. at the same time, has caught the KING OF BEERS . ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS flavor of- the times. NEWARK • I OS ANGELES .TAMPA . HOUSTON MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 5 Symposium Probes Nature of Society

by John Osier speaker's contention that indus- tance of alerting people to the try had so permeated leisure time problem, Kramer still felt that the In discussing the April 21-22 activities that they were no longer rhetoric may have worked against Symposium on Social Change in a enjoyable. The claim, he said, the speakers by clouding the under- Democracy, both faculty and stu- was exaggerated. Lee added that, lying need to do something about dents questioned the use of what as with the question of man en- the onrush of cybernation. Seit- they termed "sheer rhetoric" by joying his work, that there was no chik added that if the program several oi' the speakers. At the way to prove people weren't en- succeeded in getting students to same time it was felt that the joying leisure activities. If you discuss the problem, the rhetorical program had raised pertinent ask a man if he enjoys his water- features would be justified. questions about the nature of our proof tent or the modern camping Lee believed that the program society an-J tln> identity of man. facilities provided by state parks, should have dealt more thoroughly Dr. Richard 'IV Lee, assistant Lee said, chances are that he would with how to bring the economic professor of philosophy, found Ben say yes. phenomena it described under po- B, Seligman's contention that tech- The Symposium as a whole was litical control. Such an approach, nological progress has resulted In both criticized and praised for he said, would have first required increased alienation to be poorly itsrhetorical aspects. Pollack felt a thorough discussion of the supported and lacking in empir- that it represented "a lament that present economic and political was dealt with by New York SNCC C. Tull took Breeden's position that ical constraints. Seligman's claim modern industrial society gives a systems to determine where each representative Ivanhoe Donaldson. human rights were inherent in that men enjoy their work less person less and less control over of them is headed. The question as he phrased it being human. today than at any other time in the forces Influencing his life," a Battis disagreed with Seligman's was, "How do you tell a guy who Barrante pointed out what he be- history was criticized by Lee. The problem which he said was "al- criticism of economists for ab- is interested only in a hamburger lieved to be an inconsistancy in philosophy professor maintained ready most obvious to everyone." stractness and failure to deal with that an abstraction stands between Breeden's definition of human human values. He and Lee pointed him and that hamburger?" ' He rights. Breecien defined them both out that abstractions and models referred to the dilemma that Ne- as being inherent in being human were necessary for research pur- groes were faced with when trying and as constantly changing. Ac- poses. In research, they held, it to enter a restaurant, the ab- cording to Barrante, what is in- is necessary to work with an ideal straction being the need to take herent in being human does not or model to make comparisons. political action. Michael A. Wil- change and Breeden would have Both Lee and Battis agreed that liams '68 felt that the best tech- better said that political rights Seligman made a good point in nique was to present issues dra- •were always changing He agreed objecting to a non-historical view matically. He said that persuasive however that inalienable rights do of economics. Lee explained that techniques were not harmful as come from a source higher than even when carefully isolated the long as they remained only a man and cannot be abridged. variables of an economy do not means to an end. Tull said that the fact that represent the behavior of the whole Referring to the dangers of cy- there was a need for discussion economy when combined. bernation, Jonathan G. Granoff '70 of whether or not human rights In economics, the whole, he emphasized Carl Ogiesbys claim were inherent pointed up a pro- said, is often greater than the that making people aware of such blem1 in our society that there parts, the surplus being furnished issues was not the central govern- seems to be "no way of talking by the historical element. Lee ment. Independent research about who man is." He noted that and Battis, while agreeing with groups, professional organiza- the only argument used against van the point, both said that it re- tions, and universities should bear den Haag1 was a REDUCTO ADAB- that there Is no particular evi- Michael G. Porlides '70expressed quired a more empirical verifi- the primary burden, according to SURDUM. The failure of our cul- dence to show that a higher per- the opinion of several students in cation than Seligman gave it. Granoff. ture, represented by the argument centage of workers dislike their saying that the confab was clouded Dr. Albert Rabil, assistant pro- Granoff also cited Donaldson's according to Tull, is that there Is work now than in years past. by rhetoric and excessive play with fessor of religion, defended Ferry assertion that local governments no "common understanding of man How could anyone tell if men the audience. and Seligman for not giving solu- and school boards should have that enables us to speak of human working, for example. In cottage A large group of students, on tions or suggesting models. Their more of a say in decision making. rights except In protest of abridge- industry enjoyed their work, Lee the other hand, felt that the rhetoric point was, he said, that we needed A basic tenet of the new left, ment of those rights." asked. was justified as a means of stim- model builders. They were cal- he explained, was that those per- Lee pointed out that Seligman's ulating interest. George Fosque ling for imagination, said Rabil. sonally, involved should, make the Steele referred to Claude talk, which he termed a "loose '68 held that many students at the He saw Ferry in particular as decisions.' •""'•'•'' "• """•''•' •" : ••„•• -• Browns' statement tnaethe'btiUrttf* presentation," didn't even deal with College were quite uninformed and urging Intellectuals to begin fac- Robert A. Washington'69 pointed the Negro community, although ' e possibility that alienation was apathetic and that the program was ing up to this problem and start to Ernest van den. Haag's claim conscious of Its second class citi- nothing more than a recurring keyed to reach these individuals. building models to deal with it. that welfare actually paid people zenship, does not experience the feature of the human situation. Michael Seitchlk '68, Chairman of Several students felt that not to work as another example of identity crisis. Brown said that Alan H. Kramer '68 emphasized the Symposium Planning Com- Ferry's position on the role of the the ineffectiveness of centralized among Negroes it is only college that alienation resulting from the mittee, pointed out that there is no intellectuals was inconsistent. He government. students and intellectuals who are divorcement of a man from the Course in social change at the criticized them and the technicians • Fosque defended Alinsky against concerned about their identity, and final products of his work was not College and that it would therefore in society for putting machines charges of anti-intellectualism he implied that this concern was an a new concept, According to Kra- be a mistake to treat the topic in first and people second, saying saying that he was concerned with outgrowth of the intellectual life. mer, the important feature today too academic a manner. that in the ideal society they would short-range goals. Williams Steele felt It was a question worth 1 is that man is being divorced from Lee warned against the hasty be "brought out of their cages" only agreed that Alinsky should . be examining. even the segmental parts of hia formation of judgments about the when they were needed. Rabil in- "lauded for what . he does"- but work. He said that this complete nature of technology solely on the terpreted the comments as in- questioned his policy of abandoning Williams disagreed with Brown divorcement made the problem too basis of the speaker's comments. dicating that Ferry felt that those a community after it is organized. and said that the black power con- vast to be readily understood by He saw its positive effect as being who ought to be kept in cages are Rabil pointed to the fact that Alin- cept has given the Negro a sense those affected. The task for men that of arousing interest in a sub- now leading, not as an attack on sky,is now engaged in organizing of Identity. He emphasized that, such as Seligman, he said, was to ject. Lee drew an analogy to intellectuals. the Chicago community against the even if many Negroes were not now make people aware of cyber- "dessert before the meal," which Assistant Professor of History, Back of the Yards, an organiza- concerned with the problem, they nation's effects, An understand- he said "often spoils theappetite." Dr. H. McKim Steele, agreed with tion which he started several years would be faced with it once they es- ing of the effects of technology, the speakers in saying that to- ago. According to Rabil, the Back caped from ghetto life. Fosque, voicing the sentiments of the Yards has become Institu- Kramer held, would help allev- of a large group of faculty and. day's politicians are too often Several faculty found the Sym- iate them. taken with specific issues and tionally hardened and now repre- students, said it would be good if sents an " in group" trying to pre- posium to reveal a great deal about Seligman, as with most of the future symposiums were more fail to deal with problems in depth. the underlying philosophy of the speakers, was also criticized for "New Left." Tull observed of this falling to provide solutions or new liberal element: "If you. models. In his workshop he cited scraped away a lot of the vitri- affiliation with a movement or olic rhetoric of the left, they organization as a means of com- would be making positive claims batting alienation. Being com- for human rights and human mitted to anything, according to society." He added that they were the lecturer, was the best way to not " able to provide an under- come, to terms with an Increas- lying structure of ideas and con- ingly impersdnalized society. In- victions by which they can meet structor of math Richard Pollack the cynicism of someone like van said that this "positive thinking" den Haag." solution was no solution at all and Steele also felt that he had that it characterized Seligman as learned more about SNCC than an "industrial Norman Vincent would have been possible from Peale." Lee saw Seligman's thesis the dally press. Tull saw a "non- "partly as an expression of nos- pragmatic insistence upon certain talgia for a bygone age, partly the qualities in human life" as basic p!ea of a sensitive man for im- to the "New Left" argument. proving working conditions and Students and faculty disagreed on partly as an unsupported polemic the extent to which the symposium against modernity. He said they were characterized vent others from obtaining what succeeded in drawing a connection Lee and associate professor of academically oriented. Kramer between the problems of human held that the first step toward con- by an "unwillingness to speculate it has. Fosque admitted that the economics, Dr. Robert A. Battls, boldly about some of the larger situation could have arisen as a rights--civil rights--and cyberna- terms "irresponsible" Seligman's trolling cybernation was to make tion. Faculty seemed to feel that people aware of its dangerous implications," result of Alinsky's not havinglong- failure to mention reports demon- Steele also criticized the Sym- range goals. the connection was lost in the va- strating that automation did not effects. Kramer, in asserting Im- riety of viewpoints represented and portance of educating people to the posium' for failing to recognize Van den Haag's contention that create unemployment. One such the larger more crucial relation- human rights, and all rights, were the dialogue with the audience. Bat- report, that of the President's dangers, admitted that he couln't tis pointed out that the degree to conceive of all 120 million Amer- ships of these problems to the rest socially -given drew varied re- Commission on Automation and Of the world. He felt that both sponses from faculty and students. which the two were linked would Technology, Battis pointed out, ican voters being adequately in- depend on whether the students formed. He pointed, however, to Ferry and Seligman were limited Washington agreed that, as it now indicates that automation actually by "tinkering with national politi- stands, human rights had to be began discussing them as inter- Alinsky's statement that it took related. Lee felt that the few ties increases job opportunities and only a small percentage of a coun- cal structure." granted by society but added that that unemployment results from it was this, feature of society that which existed, were propaganda try's people to start a large move- The problem of educating people ties, not well argued connections. a lack of aggregate demand. ment. Acknowledging the impor- to the dangers ol social phenomena had to be changed. Chaplain Alan Battis also disagreed with the PAGE 6 THE TRINITY TRIPOD MAY 9, 1967

:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:•:' frimfy LETTERS to the editor Vietnam's people and villages, can to discuss some of their prob- 'Tutelage1 that victory do anyone, including lems." End ,of issue. But instead EDITORIAL SECTION the United States, any good? a group of Negroes have finally gotten together to discuss some of To the Editor: Morton E. Salomon '67 THEIR problems and everyone is At d LOSS In reply to Dr. Jacobs' open hung up, and needlessly so. letter of "counsel" to the stu- 3 On this campus there is a for- dents: "Kosher We are proud and pleased to learn of Dr. Vogel's appointment eign students' association, a New- I, for one, am not going to give man Club, a Hillel Club etc. and to the presidency of Bradford Junior College. Yet equally, we up my weekends on Dr. Jacobs' regret his loss to Trinity. To the Editor: no one in his right mind accuses say so. If there were anything them of attempting to segregate As illustrated by his accomplishments during his 20 years at really worthwhile to keep me at This ' is to notify the college themselves from the rest of the the College, Dr. Vogel has generously contributed his academic Trinity on weekends, then I would community of the formation of a campus. Why is any such group and administrative talents with much success. His accomplish- not be so eager to leave. I'm at new organization to act as the originally formed? Every minority ments cannot measure, however, his personal contribution in his college for an education, not for bargaining agent for the oppress- group has certain problems indi- willingness to talk with students on any subject, at any hour, tutelage. ed ghetto community at Trinity: genous to itself that are best and for any length of time. I was under the impression that the Kommittee to Improve Kosher solved within a group structure. it was the high mission of the Education. The following are our Further there are certain joys We commend his wise and generous administration at Trinity college to promote my intellec- present goals; and benefits that an individual and are confident that he will bring distinction to the office of tual, physical, moral, and spir- derives from membership in a president at Bradford. itual development so that I might group of his own kind. become an intelligent, self-reliant, 1. To convert the Cave into a upright, and enlightened citizen delicatessen. and leader .whose personal life is 2. To introduce Yiddish into the . Each of the afore-mentioned Scrimping happy, fruitful, and meaningful. curriculum. groups has many members, and its Is the college going to train me 3. To take over the bookstore and members are well entrenched in double prices. Trinity life. The Negro student Fresh from the ordeal of submitting our annual speculation of to be qualified effectively to meet the complex problems of the ex- 4. To replace freshman beanies has special problems on any white operating costs for the coming academic year and still uncertain citing world in which I live by with yarmulkas. campus, and especially here at of our fate, we advocate an investigation and reform of the pre- forcing me to grind out studies 5. To gain equal representation Trinity, long noted for its high sent budgeting methods.We feel that an examination of funding seven days a week? Is this a in all spheres of Trinity life, number of"Negroes on campus. methods is needed both in the Senate and in the Treasurer's Trinity Education? including erecting a statue of David We see T.A.N. as an attempt to Office. Were I an administrator, I would Ben Gurion next to that of Bishop help the individual Negro meet consider very carefully the wis- Brownell. (If TAN objects, we will some of these problems, not as For the past several weeks the Senate 3udget Committee has an attempt to self-impose either made an exhausting but frustrating attempt to distribute a total dom of assuming the role of a settle for Sammy Davis, Jr.). paterfamilias; I would not try to 6. To change the song, "The Col- a group identity or segregation, of $30,000 to approximately 30 organizations requesting more lege On The Hill" to "The College two evils that the Negro now strug- than $40,000.. The effort to fund the organizations, which thrive steamroll through the faculty a calendar change without any prior On The Hillel." gles desperately to overcome. T. or die on their appropriation, was basically well-executed. We consultation with the students; and A.N., according to its own defin- suggest, however, one' policy change. With the number of organ- finally, I would not try to promote We plan to submit our consti- ition, is attempting to root Negro izations requesting funds increasing, with costs yearly growing, student responsibility through in- tution to the Senate as soon as it students identity in their own her- and with the available pool of Senate funds not increasing pro- effectual babbling which assumes itage, not in a displaced white is revealed to us (on top of Avon heritage, where it does not be- portionally, the Senate should establish a, priority system—a that students are unable to think Mountain). and act for themselves. long. This is not to say that a value judgment of an individual organization's contribution to segregated society is the aim; campus life. M.J. Makransky '68 rather a well defined self-image James Clair '69 Alan S. Weinstein '67 is crucial to life in an integrated We feel that the student newspaper and the radio station are N.J. Makransky '68 Richard F. Kernper '67 society. You cannot function in so- among the organizations which need priority consideration to David L. Keller '67 ciety if you don't know who you Alan Mendelson '69 provide better and more extensive service to the entire college Michael A. Weinberg '67 • are. '•. • •• • •:::•.••. 'O--":..••••.'.... community. The scope and regularity of these services, which 'Any Good?' 1 •extend olitsi&e' the'college community, could be severely limited .: And what about white, students' ..by an .inadequate budget allotment,-especially in view of rising TQ the Edltdrr ' ' ' ' 1 relationships to T.A.N.? The white costs. We ask'that priority organizations be guaranteed their . I recognize '— as I am sure he 'Hung Up student should recognize the Ne- minimal budget requirement from the available pool before other intended me to -- that Mr. Wal- gro's heritage, his image of so- organizations are funded. Should the Senate determine, after an lace, '70, knows a great deal ciety, his problems, and above examination of its budgeting techniques, that it is unable to about the technical details of mod- To the Editor; all, his individuality. T.A.N. will support priority system and still adequately finance other col- ern warfare. However, his know- help the white student in becoming aware of these crucial factors. lege organizations, we suggest that the college partially fund ledge of political realities is less If an assortment of Hindus form- impressive, I would like to ask ed an association, everyone would By developing each into a fully priority organizations since these organizations service the human individual, T.A.N. will help entire campus and often alumni and friends of the college. him one question. If military vic- be mildly pleased and say, "How tory in Vietnam requires the des- nice;' Those mild-mannered In- Additionally, we ask that the Treasurer's Office present a truction of a large proportion of dians have finally gotten together (Continued on Page 7) break-down of the allocation of funds from each student's annual $150 General Fee. Each year students.pay a total of about $165,- 000 to the College for the partial financing of student center operations, insurance, laboratory fees, admission to athletic Stinking Student Government contests, and student organizations and publications. Perhaps an examination of the distribution of the General Fee would (Editor's Note— We take strong for that matter, whodeservestobe have been accomplished better lead to a fund allocation which better coincided with, the prior- exception to Mr. Hill's view- placed on a pedestal of greater without the poppycock pom- ities of students. point, but respect his right to righteousness than their fellow pousities of parliamentary pro- express divergence .with the collegians. It is more than annoy- cedure. Because it is an obsolete present student governmen- ing to consider the implications of organization, it would be good to Covenant with Whom? tal structures.) the Medusa's position. From the disband the Senate, and replace hypocrisy of the College's stand the nothingness it represents with by C.P.L. Hiil on alcohol to its stand on before- (.Last week Dr. Rabii in his Religion 235 course introduced the a regularly-held assembly open and-after hours copulation, the to all Trinity undergraduates. This "covenant" concept of instruction.: The intent, of course, is The existence of Trinity pres- commendable but the effect in practice and in its implications, Medusa typifies the worst in pre- assembly, in the rejuvenated style ent student governmental system tentious paternalism. we feel, signals a negative and regimented approach to the learn- needs to be condemned. If this of a hallowed New England town meeting, would provide those in- ing process. system is viewed with even a The Kangaroo Courts of the semblance of Intelligent reason, I terested in student governmental /•••:• Two factors particularly are distressing about Dr. Rabil's Medusa would be hysterically fun- deliberation a forum in which to •"covenant," First, the requirements of the covenant are so would suggest that no justification, ny if their decisions regarding stu- no rational raison d'etre, and no air their views. Also, it would stringent as to be unreasonable, even for the best intentioned dent discipline didn't have such enable all other active students acceptable excuse will be found to undue influence upon the apex of student, and particularly at the 200 course level. Second, the justify the past and present ac- the College's Great Chain of Being, an opportunity to participate in idea of a strictly regimented course, while insuring attendance tivities of the members of the Their judiciary abilities are the decisions concerning their own and conscientious preparation, poses the danger of instilling Medusa and Senate. In fact, these falsely assumed, and their char- welfare, without having to over- a negative intellectual spirit by its total requiredness. organizations are absolutely and acters do not support their posi- come the obstacle of an annual pop- ularity contest. Take the Senate Dr. Rabil's intent, we speculate, is to conduct the bestand undeniably worthless. tion as the safeguarders of Trinity morality and as the protectors of away from the idiots who pro- most intense course possible. We suggest, however, that even Filled with imbeciles, mental liferate it now, and give these if the members of the course, are capable of fulfulling the "co- cretins, and the warmed-up left- the ethical standards arbitrated by the administration. other people an organization for venant," a mature attitude toward course work will not have overs from high school student college improvement that is free been fostered by his method but merely heavy-handedly enforced. councils and prep school prefec- Let us haul this 19th century from the fetters of soporific sena- . We feel that the ideal of the College community is to foster tures, Trinity's student govern- anachronism down from its ex-. torial sententiousness. ment is composed of egomaniacal serious intellectual commitment in the mature atmosphere of alted plane and stop pretending boors whose actions are totally that any seven given seniors are I also recommend the abolish- freedom of the individual to self-determine the degree and manner void of value to any but them- of his commitment. In Dr. Rabil's classroom the student is left divinely endowed with the propen- ment of the office of class "presi- selves. dent." Insofar as this official's no opportunity to determine and interpret his commitment. We be- sity to uphold the laws of the ) Indeed, the Medusa is an absurd state and the regulations of the greatest moral decision is whether lieve that the requirements which Dr. Rabil stipulates are not organization from the conception College. They are pretentiously to ask Smokey the Bear and the only unreasonable but contrary to the spirit of mature and res- of its . name to the principles of prating prigs whose unjustifiable Pyromaniacs or the Bossa Nova ponsible intellectual development.. . its function. Having little to do position at Trinity makes a mock- Boojums for some sort of pedes- Failure to accept his "covenant" renders his course work with Greek mythology, and only ery of the idea of college as an in- trian promenade, his existence is unavailable and failure to execute his five requirements flaw- with jellyfish in afigurative sense, tellectual maturing ground. a blight and sacrilegious scourge lessly results in a drop-pass. We believe that Dr. Rabil could this supposedly austere camarilla to his classmates. Electing a social perpetrates the most ridiculous As for the Senate, it is an in- committee would be a better al- achieve his goal of a disciplined intellectual life by means other image conceivable. stitutional buffoonery; its defects ternative to the personality poll than, the simulation of a military academy regimen in the class- and lack of, worth are apparent to charade which presently pollutes room. There is no one in the present even the most stupid student. Noth- the foyer of Mather Hall once a .senior class, or in the junior class ing that it has done could not year. MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 7 LETTERS TAN MEMBER ANSWERS QUERIES; (Continued from Page 6) each Negro merge Into Trinity so- CLARIFIES ASSOCIATION'S AIMS ciety and thus the white student The questions raised by Mr. black people in this country, on For the reasons I have explain- T.A.N. has served a good purpose will have a friend, not a stereo- Barrante and the TRIPOD edi- this campus, is giving silent ap- ed I hope the four "Segregation" in getting them to express an type, to Interact with. torial with reference to T.A.N, proval to T.A.N.'s opposition, and writers will understand why it is opinion that they hadn't previous- also express the concern of the In effect, makes one the opposi- impossible for them to be mem- ly or at least not publicly. I hope So be damned thankful that T. members of the association. "Se- tion. To include the opposition in bers of T.A.-N. For the four to A.N. has been conceived. Trinity that this interchange of ideas will gregation" Is a possibility only If, bur membership would be foolish. Imply that because they can not continue. True Interest does not will be a better place for it, and a) as the editor suggests T.A.N. At Mount Holyoke, white students be members they can not " ex- die. Since It is impossible to put you will be a better man for It. "exploits itself as a political lev- were allowed to join the Afro- change ideas in a meaningful dia- all of T.A.N.'s ideas in a letter, er"; In effect if T.A.N. refuses American Association, Many were logue, help organize and LEARN" I hope that the four as well as Joseph E. McKelgue '68 dialogue with the college commun- opposed to the organization or did really makes me doubt their mo- the remainder of the campus will Michael Mermey '67 ity, or b) if T.A.N. is compelled not understand its orientation. The tives. The negative rather posi- to isolate because others refuse entire direction of the organiza- tive stand they have taken is un- to understand, cooperate w.ith, constantly be involved in dialogue tion was changed, spoiled; and fortunate, however, I firmly be- and the activities of T.A.N. question and criticize what T.A.N. many of the soul sisters felt forced lieve that any stand is .better "A hysmal" Is doing. Until there is exposure, which to withdraw from the association. than none! It is interesting that results in the creation of dialogue, With the former In mind, I They were outvoted. numerous students, Including Mr. leading to mutual participation In would like to re-emphasize the Lucas and Mr. Barrante, have ap- To the Editor; The four writers of "Segrega- activities, and as a result, a com- fact that T.A.N. has as explicit- tion" ask how to "acknowledge" proached members of T.A.N, to plete understanding, there will be ly as possible Invited the college acquire a better understanding, Very little is shocking about a the black student. It has been a need for T.A.N. When this has to participate in an open dialogue a very pleasant revelation for me yet the "Segregation" writers have been accomplished avoidance will bad press. Given the tendency on any level. There are no pro- not. I can't help but feel that among the Tripod's reviewers to to find that the average Trinity have become awareness. grams on the T.A.N. agenda which student is not prejudiced but ap- equate criticism with derrogatlon, are exclusive. In fact, a number nothing but an unfavorable review prehensive. A great deal of his of white students are already In- apprehension is due to a lack of could be expected. What Is shock- volved in T.A.N., projects and ing about the review of COLLAGE contact, because the Trinity stu- Wesley an Policy Shows members of T.A.N. have joined in dent has not interacted with black is not Its general negativism, but the activities of other students. that, as criticism, it Is simply people, he is wary of how to ap- abysmal. I would vehemently disagree with proach them and wonders if he Disapproval of Drug Use the Idea expressed by the writers should approach -them.. The re- of "Segregation" that the college verse is also true. A number of Wesleyan last week announced versity "unequivocally disap- We are told that we have not should AVOID dealing with Ne- black students (before the exis- its new policy on the use and dis- proves" of illegal possession and/ "met squarely/the responsibility groes as a group. It is because tence of T.A.N.) would have been tribution of hallucinogenic and nar- or professionally unsuperviseduse of editing a creative magazine." of this AVOIDANCE that there very uptight If approached , as a cotic drugs on campus. Days ear- of drugs. Deciphering the muddled sentence are problems germane to Negro black person. T.A.N. feels that lier the Wesleyan ARGUS report- The president and Stanley J. structure, our responsibility people. When there are no Ne- there Is need for neither the black ed that the college had expelled Idzerda, dean of the College, both seems to have been "to present gro girls at a freshman mixer nor white student to feel this way. a student, the third of this aca- termed the Wesleyan drug problem student work." Where did we go then there exists a problem shared I no longer want you to avoid my demic year, for the use of drugs. severe. They recommended that wrong? Perhaps we should have by all of the Negro freshman; a color because I am black and proud The Wesleyan statement on the college educate: the Wesleyan presented the student work in a problem that is not the result of of it. Maybe T.A.N., in it's self drugs threatened possible "separ- student body concerning the var- square magazine? The answer the individual's personality but definition chose the wrong words. ation from the school" for students ious drugs and the consequences •comes at the end of the article, the fact that he is a member of A better word might be exposure. found to be providing1 drugs tooth- of their use. "We will also sup- where "creative" has been ex- a group. When the other girls re- T.A.N. desires to expose itself, ers, and indicated the administra- port the studies of the student- changed for "creative writing": fuse to dance with the Negro stu- i.e. expose black people, expose tion's strong disapproval of the faculty committee on Drugs and "...one wonders whether it would dent is it the college's duty to black feeling, black art, black use or possession of drugs. Wes- encourage a continuing discus- not be more valuable for the cam- find a "mixer mate" for the in- history, black problems and black leyan President Butterfield, in a sion on the relationship of drug pus to have more creative writing dividual student or should the col- future. In response we hope that letter to the entire college, wrote use of private rights and respon- the college community will 1.) if sibilities and its potential impact and a colorless cover," COL- lege Invite schools which Negro that "we consider it an especially LAGE, It seems, is no longer a girls attend? Solving the indivi- they misunderstand question as the upon the community." writers of "Segregation" have .serious offense for any member magazine of the arts, but must dual's problem does not help the of the Wesleyan community ille- The Wesleyan statement was confine itself to writing. Movement (as has been proven by done, but 2.) do not reject as they issued after months of study and have chosen to do. T.A.N. desires gally to sell, provide, share or the middle class Negro.) distribute drugs. Any such of- talks by the College Body Commit- This objection also takes the a meaningful dialogue; by exposing tee, the joint student-faculty ,cc is ! There is a difference in treating fense will beviiajidled by the, releT .., form»*Hr^he nft*ga*2rl'rt» '*»'belftg too ourselves to be picked, padded, Negroes as individuals and ignor- prodded and pleased by the col- vaht student and faculty commit- . and we are told not to tees and the administration and Committee of the Faculty. The ing their blackness. The latter is lege, How can non-black people statement was rewritten several - what T.A.N. is trying to stop. expose themselves as black? may result In separation from the (Continued on Page 10) Avoiding the fact that there are University for the offender." But- times before its final approval. terfield also noted that the Unl- Earlier drafts contained a clause which threatened separation from the college of any student found to possess or use drugs. An ARGUS editorial supported LOOKING FOR THE 'NEW LEFT the new drug policy on the grounds that It is necessary to protect the community welfare, particularly by Alan S. Wi nter of'people, he is merely spouting in discouraging violations and con- victions at the state level where What is especially difficult to off ideology. To the New Left, an abstract, penalties are more stringent. discover is a New Left Philoso- Views Left and Right "With its emphasis on controlling phy. Within the "movement" are nebulous "society" is responsible for what foolish or ignorant men and limiting drug use, the Uni- quite a number of independent versity is attempting to avoid a organizations founded at differ- with other new leftists is their do, Students are urged to go out basic gripe with present conditions by William T. Barrante and "love," a term which has be- potentially explosive situation," ent times for various reasons. To the editorial noted. group together under one label all in society. Utopia for them, how-, come sterile. We must work for ever, is LSD, pot, bananas, not The Students for a Democratic an abstract "humanity," a term The expulsion of the Wesleyan the interests, the motivations, the which globs all persons into one tactics, and the backgrounds of the social reform. Anti-socialism Is Society, the most articulate of student came after his involve- their realization of true individual- the "New Left" groups, recently mass, and reduces people to face- ment in several drug incidents. members of such organizations and less ciphers. The New Left tends at the same time to seek a Phil- ism. Unfortunately, this group is held a forum at which they tried According to the ARGUS, college often pictured as the "new gener- to sell their product to the Class to define what they are after in officials had earlier requested that osophy of New Left (or as some terms of "human rights," which the student be sent home for med- would have it, a Philosophy of ation". of 1970. Among their speakers was Professor James Gardner, no government may violate. Un- ical reasons. Upon parental re- Anti-Law) is to miss the signi- To the older generation, the new fortunately, the government does quest he had been allowed condi- ficance of the movement. If any leftists appear naive. If the im- who described the major fault of the New Left; their apparent in- not need the RIGHT to tyrannize tionally to stay out this academic thing can be said at this point, perfectibility of man is fact rath- when it has the POWER to do so. year. April 26, however, the stu- it is that the New Left Is anti- er, than fiction, then the new left ability to distinguish the norma- tive ("should") from the empirical The: New Left in general, and dent was again implicated in a organization; it is without ideol- movement is misdirected, naive violation in the use of drugs when ogy. and futile. New Left implies a ("is"), whence derives their pen- the SDS in particular, are not chant for disregarding the real radicals, if "radical" means wav- he was found in bed with a female Yet the movement is not with- New Humanism, for man is seen guest who suffered unfavorable re- out aims. The Students for a Dem- as the center of the mechanized world in favor of the Ideal. ing in a New Order. With the ex- Mr. Nick Egleson, the national ception of Ideologues like Mr., actions from the use of drugs. ocratic Society gives as its cri- world. Often the new leftists can Egleson, the New Left is really The student and his female guest teria for a better society in the be heard speaking about the 'de- president of SDS, says that Am- erica "teaches people to distrust Neo-Romantic, and, because of its were found in bed by the girl's Port Huron Statement; "the es- personalized' society. According naivete, about as effective as Wil- parents. tablishment of a democracy of in- to the Port Huron Statement man themselves," and that it is only right to remedy this. What, Mr. liam Jennings Bryan was in 1896. dividual participation, governed by is "infinitely precious and posses- They are actually reacting against two central aims; that the indi- sed of unfulfilled capacities for Egleson fails to note is that, in spite of his ideology, man Is not their Old Left fathers, who helped vidual share in those social de- reason, freedom, and love." create the Leviathan they deplore. cisions determining the quality Critics of the New Left ac- basically good (Original Sin), and SYMPO '68 that it is only human to distrust, Basically existential, the New and direction of his life; that so- cuse the movement of displaying Leftists feel that it is beneath SYMPO '68 will hold its ciety be organized to encourage misdirected aggressiveness. Be- as it is to hate, lie, and murder. Only human beings are'capable of . their dignity to compromise. first organizational meeting Independence in men and provide cause many of the organizations Fortunately, though, there are Thursday at 4 p.m. In Alumni the media for their common par- of the New Left are loose in committing immoral acts. Man is a combination of good and evil, rational and sensible people on Lounge, according to Michael ticipation." The statement goes on structure and do not concentrate the New Left who have the op- P. Seltchik '68, former chair- to list specific objectives. Acti- on one facet of the impure society, and unfortunately the evil tends to dominate, portunity to "unmisdlrect" the man of the Sympo '67 planning vities of the SDS have included such accusations hold ground. movement, among them Prof. committee. Seltchik empha- projects in low-incomed areas, Were the New Left, however, to Men, however, can purge them- sized that planning for next selves oi evil by-putting "checks Gardner and Mr, Carl Oglesby, reform movements on academic become highly organized around a former SDS national president. The year's Symposium must be- campuses, protest actions against central issue, the seeds of self and balances" upon themselves gin immediately. Students In- through institutions such as the New Left should place personal our foreign and'domestic policies. destruction would be planted. If freedom, before a theoretical dem- terested in working on Sympo the movement is no more than a 'Church, family, associations, and, '68 should attend* the Thurs- Also considered new radicals wejre necessary, government. Thus ocracy, and economic freedom be- are those individuals of the "hip- passing fade, hopefully much of fore an abstract "equality" or day meeting or contact Mar- its gospel of love, self-examina- when Mr. James Kaplan, form- tin Williams or Larry Whipple pie-scene". Instead of active par- er Trinity SDS president, blames " social justice." A truly free mar- ticipation in worldly affairs, many tion, and human improvement will ket is the best way to "let the of the Senate Lecture Com- remain as sustaining human alienation on Institutions rather mittee. , •:• often "tune in, turn on, and drop- than on the inherent weaknesses people decide." out." What they have in common values. MAY 9, 1967 PAGE 8 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Sartre View Students Required to Sign Of Prose 'Covenant' in Rabil Course Interpreted Students attempting to gain ad- to" certain "stipulations." tions about them frequently arise. mittance Friday to Dr. Albert Ra- The first four "stipulations" According to the covenant, "No bil's course, "Religion and Social mentioned are "1) attendance at such'questions will be entertained Change," found it necessary to EVERY class session; 2) COM- in this course." "For Sartre, language is prop- sign what the assistant professor PLETION of the assigned reading Elaborating on the fifth stipu- erly a medium of communication; of religion termed a "covenant." for every class session; 3) will- lation, the statement read "any1 poets are people who refuse to 1 Part of the covenant's effect is to ingness to enter into DISCUSSION student who fails to fulfill all the use language," according to Phil- require a student to drop the in every class; 4) completion of stated requirements throughout the osophy Club lecturer, Professor course at any time he fails to pre- all assignments ON TIME." course will be expected to with- M. Stassen of Wesleyan Univer- pare an assignment on time or The fifth requirement reads: draw himself and accept a grade sity. Stassen addressed the topic cuts a class. of drop-pass." "Philosophy and Literature" in a "agreement to drop the course at Monday afternoon talk in Alumni The covenant states that "No any point during the semester Rabil explained that his primary Lounge. one should consider this course that you are unable to fulfill all intention is to develop a "com- who does not take himself ser- of lhese requirements; and agree- munity of an intellectual elite" iously as a student and who is not ment to tell the professor when into a discussion group in which Stassen explained that, accord- willing to accept a disciplined; this occurs and the reasons for "continuity" is maintained at all ing to Sartre, language exists as approach to the intellectual life." its occurring (so far as you can times. He claimed that the "im- both communication and expres- "Many factors will be consid- distill them)." portance of discipline must be sion, implying a rigorous distinc- ered," according to the document, Rabil emphasized in the state- maintained" as it is "not enough Dr. Albert Rabil tion between prose and poetry. "to determine whether particular ment that "these conditions are to depend on natural enthusiasm," Prose writers use words as signs, students are chosen to partici- no different from what every pro- The religion professor added would be willing to discuss the whereas poets use them as ob- pate in the course." "But the fessor expects when a student that there might be circumstances rules of procedure in class in the jects, he said. For Sartre, the most Important criterion will be enters his classroom." He said in which it would be possible to fall, but not until the covenants only literature and thus the only the student's willingness to agree waive the rules. He said that he true art of language is prose. however that in most classes ques- were signed. According to Stassen, the strength of Sartre's literary theory, as ex- pressed. In BEING AND NOTH- INGNESS and WHAT IS LITERA- TURE?, is that it defines langu- age for the prose writer as a sys- tem of words to be used. For Sartre words are to be used in communi- Summervacationitis. cation, to deal in questions of faith; hence prose is a commit- (How to spot and get rid of) ment by the writer which demands a commitment from the reader. As he saw it, real poetry, such as the works of Rimbaud and Maliarme, is communication only accidently, while prose Is communication essentially, and Pallid peepers. thus the superior use of langu- There's no sparkle in those baby-blue age. eyes. It's been knocked out by all those Fluorescent fade-out. exams. Get that vitality back. See what good is still left in the world. Go to From this Stassen concluded that That's from being cooped up all winter Expo 67, Montreal. Sartre was essentially a moralist. What you need for that sallow pallor Sartre's statement, "To be is to be for others," he said, implied is some sunshine Vitamin D. There's a •>' that a work of art is created'by whole lot of if available at" Sunset the writer and the reader, by Beach in Acapulco. the interplay of their freedoms. He sees Sartre's definition of good art as being that which appeals to the reader's freedom and demands a commitment. Lip lingo. They're letters from good buddies away for the summer. The best way to avoid them is not to be • there when they arrive. Be in Puerto Rico instead.

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College fatigues. That's the uniform you wore all semester. BLTDown. Get rid of those o.d.'s (olive drabs). tuition Break out the white levis. And throw on That's all you've^known summer a colorful Mexican serape. after summer. A change of palate worries? would do you good. In Bermuda a End them all few savory morsels of Hopping John by selling Ice with a sauce of Paw-Paw Montespan Cream this summer from a usually does the trick. profit-proven mobile ice cream truck. You're on your own with a complete rooney- making program.

For further information or a'des- cript ire hrofhurc, call or write We want everyone to fly MANLEY COLONIAL , A.Subsidiary of H. P. Hood & Sons •1Q2' Rutherford Avr.. (rear) Note: If symptoms get worse, see your travel agent or call Eastern. Bos(on. Muss. 02U9 lei: 242-5100 i MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 9 Vietnam - National Interest

by Jeff Wi Ikinson and aggression in Tibet, Korea (by icy of retrenchment. There are Barry Scatton sanctioned proxy) and India all no historical precedents of either reflect the expansionist potential Soviet or Red Chinese agreement In general terms our national of the Chinese. But it should be to either a national or regional interest Is determined by corre- noted that they have never in- "no-man's land" or the division of lating and deciding the influence itiated direct agressive moves a region into spheres of Influence. of all factors (generally military, against the United States military Their ideological framework has economic, political, and psycho- anywhere In Asia previously es- discounted such compromise with logical) In relation to the long run tablished as "vital" to our nation- the capitalist world on many oc- international position of the United al interest. Present troubles with- casions in the past. It would thus States. Beyond our own interest in in China may have some unfore- seem that continued United States these factors, they must be dis- seeable influence, but it seems presence in Southeast Asia is re- cussed primarily relative to the that the Chinese do not seek in quired if we wish to maintain some- Soviet Union (through the world) any way a direct confrontation with thing approaching the present bal- and increasingly to China (in Asia). the United States. Thus the main- ance in the area. With the exception of Indonesia, tenance of United States presence South Vietnam is not the stra- Southeast Asia (Cambodia, Burma, in Southeast Asia has been and will tegic "key" to Southeast Asia. The Thailand, Laos, both Vietnams, continue to be a predominant fac- present psychological commitment Malaysia, and Indonesia) ranks tor in any Chinese calculations Is the only factor which could work relatively low in relation to our aimed at direct expansion of their to make South Vietnam this "key" THE TEMPTIN1 TEMPTATIONS will appear at the FfeMhouse position in Southeast Asia. national interest. The four keys to to Communist expansion. The need from 4 to 6 p.m. Saturday with King Curtis providing the back- the future of these countries are for the realignment of Southeast Asian policy combined with the ground sounds. The IFC-Senior Ball extravaganza will ai*» the Soviet Union, China, the United Thus, we feel a "retrenchment" feature the melodious sounds of the Dick Madison Orchestra States, and Indonesia. For Russia, policy (most likely a maintenance detrimental psychological and po- the strategic, economic, and po- of our position in Thailand) would litical effects that such a realign- Friday night in the Washington Room. Tickets will be sold litical values of Southeast Asia go far to: 1) bring the cost of our ment will cause presents a major during the week in the Mather Hall foyer and at the door. One (excluding Indonesia) are almost Southeast Asian policy in line with problem in tactics and procedure. ticket is good for a round trip to both events. as minimal as for us. They have its relative importance; 2) main- The strategic effects of a retrench- no desire to divert resources and tain United States presence, thus ment policy will most likely create tity. It should be made clear that time to Southeast Asia except to creating a perhaps decisive factor temporary doubts in the minds of the United States will react to the extent that such involvement in deterring overt Chinese ex- and policies of other Southeast overt aggression in a decisive Student Life. Asian nations and our allies in the manner, similar to our response South Pacific region (the Philip- in Korea, However, it should also (Continued from Page 1) pines, , New Zealand). be made decisively apparent that Their belief In our continued in- the chief burden of defense against complete Individual development. terest in maintaining our position covert Communist expansion will A second committee, a sub- in Southeast Asia will be tempora- fall on the shoulders of the coun- committee of the Senate headed by rily shaken, tries of mainland Southeast Asia Lloyd J. Kramer '69, will use the themselves. We must make it clear implications of the Social Evalua- For these reasons any dis-en- that we Intend to avoid a commit- tion to determine specific re- ment similar to our present one commendations for changes In the gagement from Vietnam should be present social structure of the aimed at saving as much prestige in Vietnam. The situation in as possible and giving us some time Thailand, the proposed base of College. Following a thorough to stabilize our altered position in our new policy, would offer the study, the sub-committee will pre- most delicate problems in main- sent its specific recommendations Southeast Asia. However, on to the Senate for consideration, balance, the disproportionate cost taining this balance. We feel, how- of our present commitment far ever, that the possibilities of a Miles welcomes student com- outweighs the possible detrimental major revolt in Thailand are mini- mentary on the Evaluation and Its psychological effects of dls-en- mal in the foreseeable future. implications. He sees as the pur- gagement fr.om Vietnam. The em- pose of the Social Evaluation "to' phasis should thus be on achieving In sum, South Vietnam has very stimulate among all segments of a dis-engagement. little Importance to our national the college community thought and interest, ,except the influence our future action in Improving the so- The possibility of a series of withdrawal would have on the attl- * J^1 Communist-inspired and guided tudes and policies of other South- College." " national liberation" movements In east Asian countries and China *5*R0Y PINGLE 70 and David Nichols 70 fill out their TRIPOD the other countries of mainland (psychological effects on the poli- Vietnam questionnaires, Thursday. All student questionnaires Southeast Asia resulting from the cies of nations elsewhere in the must be returned by midnight tonight. Results will be publish- proposed retrenchment policy has world will be virtually unaffected SEMINAR ed in next week's issue. not been discussed. It seems to by our proposed policy in South- Any upperclassman major- causes the United States to com- pansion or overt Chinese expan- us that as long as the United east Asia). The present policy ing in Economics, English, mit disproportionately larger slon-by-proxy; 3) minimize the States is established in Southeast puts a disproportionate emphasis "Government, History, Philos- amounts of energy and resources psychological and political losses Asia as a counterweight to China, on the importance of South Viet- ophy, Psychology, or Religion the possibility of success of such nam. Our goal should be to balance to the same area. China is the of withdrawal from Vietnam. the energy and cost of our South- I who Is interested in teaching only one of these four which has The idea of the creation of a movements (except In Laos) is in the Trinity Seminar Pro- unlikely. Those countries which east Asian policy within the de- ; substantial strategic, economic, "neutral" Southeast Asia or the scribed limits, thus allowing a' gram next year please con- and political interests in South- tacit agreement to spheres of in- seek United States aid in con- more balanced and beneficial pol- tact Peter Ehrenberg, Box east Asia, and the ability to seek fluence are alternatives in line trolling such incursions as develop 1475 or \iones 107 before Sun- icy elsewhere in the world; in to achieve its interests in the with our general policy aim but should be given United States sup- short, a policy more consistent day, May 14. area. Tnis, and the possible psy- they seem to the authors to be port (except in Laos -• already a with our national Interest. chological effects of Communist unrealistic alternatives to a pol- hopeless situation)In limited quan- expansion, are the two major fac- tors weighing in the determina- tion of United States interest and policy in relation to Southeast Asia. However, except for Indo- nesia, no one or more of the IN MV PAYI MAM, UP WAY fOU $eu AUY cm FOUODJSP Mf other Southeast Asian nations war- ANYTHING. rants a commitment even ap- proaching the present size of our Vietnam commitment. The idea of r 1>S£P TO denying China the economic ad- vantages of Southeast Asia and AW MY the psychological effects of their useo loss call at most for a far more am>. limited policy. Our present com- mitment to Vietnam is thus con- sidered extremely disproportion- ate to our over-all position in international relations.

The decisive factor in any dis- cussion of disengagement from Vietnam is China's reactions and the Influence, eventual withdrawal will have on her future policy. It is important to make it clear that the authors look upon China as the "paper tiger" of Asia. Their aggressive words about de- stroying United States imperial- ists are not backed up by deeds. It is doubtful that withdrawal from . Vietnam alone would lead to di- rect Chinese predominance in the Policy decisions of a Communist Vietnam. Combining this with a continued United States presence R in Southeast Asia (but not Vietnam) the threat of direct Chinese ex- pansion seems minimal, Chinese PAGE 10 THE TRINITY TRIPOD MAY 9, 1967

LETTERS to the editor Campus Notes Peace Corps Jesters Class of 70 (Continued from Page 7) point is that the magazine is too The Jesters will produce their Due to unavoidable circum- small, he reviews only seven out Applications for the Peace Corps I; programs that begin training this last play of the season this week, stances, one candidate's name was jabber that sparkling word 'mon- of the thirteen distinct pieces pre- from Wednesday May 10 to Sun- not included on last Thursday's sented. He is even guilty of mis- summer are due on Monday, May ey'." When Mr. Bauer grows up, 15. Applicants should send com- day May 14. Evening performances freshman ballot and a revote has he will find that even literary construction of the fact; we re- except Sunday will start at 8:15 been scheduled for today in the member no statement to the ef- pleted Questionnaires, to Office magazines have to be paid for, of Selection, Peace Corps, Wash- p.m. Sunday's performance will Mather Hall Foyer. The final el- this one far in excess of its Sen- fect that "three poems worth print- be a matinee starting at 2:30 p.m. ections for freshmen will be to- ing have been written by students ington D.C. 20525. The .Question- ate allotment, and to the tune of aires can be obtained from the morrow. twenty-two dollars a page. during this academic year." COL- LAGE, not a literary magazine Peace Corps Liason on campus or Although Mr. Bauer disapproves but a magazine of the arts, mere- in most Post Offices. Class Agents of all the writing we have print- ly presented, from its seventy or ed, he tells us to enlarge the so contributions, the thirteen best. Delta Phi Chapel Gilbert Campbell '67 will re- magazine and print more of the We are sorry, incidentally, that place John Dombrowski '67 as an same. Conversely; we are ex- Mr. Bauer's several poems were The campus chapter of the Delta The Chapel's Whitsunday Ves- assistant class agent. pected to do this at a sacrifice not among the thirteen. Phi Fraternity has recently elect- pers service, Sunday May 14 will in graphics, although it seems that ed the following officers; Alvah include the music of Thomas Tal- Balloonists our graphics are among the few Love, Hinckley III '68, president; Ro- lis, a Renaissance composer for things we printed that he likes. Lionel Tardif Editor bert-Pine '68, vice-president; Er- the Chapel Royal, sung by the Balloon race competitors who for the nest Williams '68, treasurer; Pe- Cantores Sancti, choir of St. John's have received their cards should The rest of Mr. Bauer's crit- ter Gable '69, corresponding sec- Church of West Hartford and by return them to Box 811, Trinity Executive Board the Trinity Chapel Choir. They icism is simply a matter of like, of COLLAGE retary; Edward Doyle '69, re- College, before Saturday, May 13. dislike, and conventional critical cording secretary; David Soule will sing at 5:00 p.m. in the The winner will be announced in mistakes. In calling our front cov- '68, steward. Chapel. next week's TRIPOD. er "primitive" he mistakes pri- mary conceptual content for the work Itself, and presupposes the inferiority of the primitive to, say, the sophisticated. In his study of our back cover he exhibits the same tendency, as well as the in- tentional fallacy. His praise for our "literature cycle" is couched in the terms of the man who dis- likes Frye, again a judgement of primary conceptual content rather than the work. He is, how- DGAIt ever, so good as to tell us that some of our poems are "valid" or even "true". We promise, there- fore, to refrain In the future from printing any false poems. His ques- tion mark after the 1964 date of Kierstead's poem seems to evince the same, consistent notion that the art of the past is out of style, as does his modernization of the diction of "You bets your money World War I Ace Snooping Around for a New Car and you takes your chance." Re- thy's poem, to which he awards high praise, is by no means the DEAR REB: best work In the magazine. Kier- stead's poem, whichus, is crit- I'm a former World War I Air Ace, and when it comes to buy- icized lor "using"language-"and ing a ne.w.car, I can really fly off the handle. Frankly, the whole Images not totally unheard of," but is thus consistent with the tra- thing is a dogfight for me. I'm tired of piloting my present car ditions of allegory, Courtly Love, and have got my sights set on a performance model that'll let French Symbolism, and the work me strut in style. But its price has got to be solo it won't shoot of Yeats, Dante, Homer, and Eliot. me down. I'm banking on you to help me find one, Reb., As for Brewer's overly climactic ending, we are willing to submit MAX, THE RED BARON the author's explication of how these "catastrophes" are neces- sary. DEAR RED BARON: Don't be blue, MaxLTri-winging around in a new Dodge . In fine, Mr. Bauer takes an equivocal position: "Faith, here's Coronet R/T-Road/Track. The hottest new performance car an equlvocator, that could swear of the year. Standard equipment includes a 440-cubic-inch, in both the scales against either 4-barrer Magnum V8. Front bucket seats. Air-scoop hood de- scale,, who committed treason sign. High-performance Red Streak nylon tires-and more! enough for God's sake, yet could Join the Dodge Rebellion in a Coronet R/T-you can do it for not equivocate to heaven;" or, as we say in Maine, he sits on the peanuts. And as for your present car: Junker. fence with both ears to the ground. Mr. Bauer's article, derrogatory in tone, nonetheless praises five out of the seven works it men- tions, yet the praise is couched in sarcasm. And although its main

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Certified Hair Stylist- MAY 9, 1967 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 11 Frosh Nelters Football Hall of Famers Beat Pawling; Honor Wrzosek at Dinner Await Wesmem More than 300 persons were In The principal speakers for the attendance at the first dinner of evening were the two college foot- • Although bad weather forced two ball coaches of the year, Tom Ca- matches to be cancelled, the the Northern Connecticut Chapter of the National Football Founda- hill of West Point and Trinity's Freshman Tennis Team managed tion and Hall of Fame Thursday Dan Jessee. Dr. William M. Moore.. to play Trinity Pawling before the night in Mather Hall. the Athletic director at Central rain fell once again. Going one Honored at the affair were four Connecticut State College served game above .500, the squad de- as toastmaster. feated the previously undefeated outstanding scholar - athletes. Trinity's Howie Wrzosek received Other speakers Included Har- Pawling team 5-1/2--3-1/2. the award for the .college level, vey Harman, executive director of After gaining a 4-2 lead at the while Kirk Parker of Suffield Aca- the National Football Foundation end of the singles competition on demy was the preparatory school and Hall of Fame, the chairman of the strength of victories by cap- TOASTMASTER - Dr. Wil- introduces one of the main winner. Representing the large the Awards Committee, Professor tain Chuck Wright, AL Gibby, Bill high schools was Windsor High's Alexander MacKImmie of Trinity, Anderson, and Bevo Biven, Trinity liam M. Moore, (standing) speakers for the evening in Athletic Director at Central David Johnson, and In the small- and President Albert C. Jacobs, only needed one doubles victory Mather Hall. medium high school category Mike Introduced at the dinner were to wrap up the match. But Trin- Connecticut State College, Vlauk of Pulaski High School took Ken Carpenter, new coach for the ity Pawling's doubles strength the honors. Charter Oaks, Tom Borstlre, new posed a threat to the afternoon. Levi Praises Team Play Coach for Holy Cross, Dr. Ed Gibby and Anderson met two de- Anderson, former Holy Cross termined Pawling players. After Coach, and Jim Hickey, UConn losing the first set 6-4, the Trin- Athletic Director. ity pair gained control and man- Union, Conn. Valley Down Stickmen aged to win the second set 7-5. John (Clipper) Smith was nomi- The third set was hotly contested, nated to the National Hall of Fame 1 by the Chapter. Smith was a for- but the Pawling number one doubles After dropping a 3-3 contest to goals in the final period to end was the return of injured crease team eked out a 6-4 victory. mer Notre Dame All-American Union Tuesday, the Bantam la- the game at 9-3. man John Faulkrod. His presence guard from Hartford. With the score 4-3 and with the crosse squad reached Its poten- Bruce Fraser scored the first gave the team a much needed second doubles team of Wright and tial for the first time all season of these on a carry around the lift and his goal on a Duncan Smith .. '-;r« Blven struggling In their match, In a charity game against the cage. His shot glanced off the pass was one of the finest of the 1 goalie's stick and in for the tally. M 3 ' the third team of Dave Carmen and Connecticut Valley Lacrosse Club, season. •'•J. Pete Campbell realized that they Friday night. Dan Haden collected Trin's fi- had to win. After a nervous begin- Although the club, composed nal score for the day as he picked Ovary Hours ? ning, Carmen and Campbell settled mainly of college graduates and up a wayward pass that slipped by Parietal.* (aF. parietal, ad down to make the match a rout. former Ali-Americans, edged the Fraser and bounced it into the L. parietalis, F, PARIES) 1. Combining hard ground strokes Blue and Gold in the final second net, a. Anat and Zool. Belonging with an aggressive net game, the of pla' 8-7, the game added need- Tufts proved to be a very strong, to or connected with wall of Trinity team simply overpowered ed cor/idence to the team. Trail- solid team that was just a bit body or any of its cavities. their opponents. The final score ing 6-2, at the half, the Bantam's rougher and faster than the Ban- b. bot. belonging to, connec- was 6-2, 6-0, and the match was played what Captain Alex Levi tam squad. The game against the ted with or attached to the1 clinched. considered their "best half of the Connecticut Valley Lacrosse Club, wall of a hollow organ or year" In the final two periods. nevertheless, raised the hopes of structure, especially of ovary The defense held the club to two the Trln team. They must win or of a cell 1830. 2. In U.S. Varsity Netmen goals while an offense minus Wil- the next three games of the season Pertaining to residents and lie Wight and Bob McDorman tal- against Holy Cross, UMass, and order within the walls of a Wesle.yan, In order to even out college, as in P. board, P. Whip Union, lied five times against a '66 Trin- their record at 5-5. Today the ity graduate and All-American Committee at Harvard Col- squad travels to the Holy Cross lege 1837. COACH OF THE YEAR King Hurlock. field, while Saturday Trln plays Springfield Behind 7-3 in the third period host to the Mass, team. *Oxford University Dictionary Tom Cahill the Bantams fought back tying the After two lopsided defeats on Winning matches last week score at 7-7. Bruce Fraser tal- the road, the Freshmen Lacrosse against Union and Springfield, the lied twice, while crease attack- team returned home Friday with a Varsity Tennis team greatly im- men Nate Rath and Nat Prentice proved sound victory over Choate, 5-2v 'also scored a pair. Tony Bryant Never behind, the. Blue and Gold with the victories, their picked up the remaining goal. In record rose to 4 and 2. struck early on a goal by Duncan FOR SALE the final seconds of the fourth Smith. The score was quickly upped Facing Springfield on Thursday, period Connecticut Valley carried as Frank Stowell rifled in a goal HONDA SUPER HAWK the Varsity netmen clearly showed the ball against a Trinity team from the right front of the crease. their superiority as they won all down a man due to a penalty. With The game was sparked by heads 19 months old nine individual matches. Of these only one second left in the game up play by the mldfields and the nine the only one to go three sets the "All-Stars" scored the decid- defense. Goals by Dick Hoffman and 5,600 miles was Mike Davison at first singles ing goal. Peter Wiles after picking up loose Good Condition who lost 6-3 before winning 6-2, Against Union, now 4-1 on the balls typifies the middies' play 6-0. The other singles matches year, the visiting Trin team ran all day.. Choate's mere two goals were all easy victories for Trin- into Some rough competition. Both indicates the tremendous effort of Contact Witt Barlow ity as Springfield was only able teams got off to a slow start and defenslvemen Tony DIBella, John to win a total of ten games. Doubles in the first period the Engineer's Hoffman, Dan Nichols, Jerry proved equally unchallenging for made the most of two lapses at Crowley, and goalie John Warm- Box 1409 the Bantams as the Griggs-Davi- midfleld to put them two up. In bold. son, Beautyman-Ttlney, and Til- the second stanza the teams traded den Loeb combinations soundly goals to make the score 3-1 at the Perhaps thehighlightofthegame defeated their opponents. break. Rick Ratzan scored the Earlier in the week the Ban- first Bantam goal as he battled for tam raquetmen whipped their Union and slapped in a loose ball at and now. opponents 8-1. The only loss was the mouth of the cage. JADE 1 Boeb Loeb at. sixth singles. In the third period the hosts Happy, Happy, At third doubles the Behrend- exploded for four tallies to make Blxler combination made Its sea- It a 7-1 affair. McPhee's men were Happening! son debut and won easily. only able to match Union's two CORAL Hold a class party or THE ALL NEW A NEW AFTER SHAVE & COLOGNE dance aboard the Dolly Madison. It'll be the*hap- WASHINGTON DINER, be piest ever!

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PARK SWANK Inc.-Sole Distributor THE TRINITY TRIPOD MAY 9, 1967 PAGE 12 Minukas Pitches Past Wesleyan, 8-3 "I'll tell you how to spot a good coach," Coach Dan Jessee began as his team boarded the Middletown-bound bus, "he's one who is in an opposing town, being chased out by an angry mob i and makes it look like he's leading a parade." ,„ , Former reserve outfielder Wally Burns tapped a lead-off home run in a rout over Wesleyan, first baseman Buddy Kupka suffered a !• season-ending shoulder separation, and Gonnecticut's now notorious spring rains cancelled another contest: baseball's week at Trinity. Following right-hand hurler George Minukas, the Bantams captured an 8-3 victory over Wes- leyan at Andrus Field last Wednesday in the lone game scheduled between the rivals this season. Minukas fanned ten and allowed no walks in traveling the nine-innings to Trinity's second vict- VOL. L ory against three defeats. Wesleyan connected for nine hits, including a LeClair homer, and dropped to a 4-3-1 record with the loss. Taking Tom Nary's place in centerfield, Wally Burns snatched three hits: a single, and a double as well as his lead-off home run, and drove in three runs. Together the Trinity nine took 14 hits off Cardinal pitchers John Andrus and Jacques Le- I Gette. In the second inning the Hilltop crew scored another run on Rich Coyle's double after singles by Buddy Kupka and George Minukas. I Together the Trinity nine took with Wesleyan. Early inthe.season SOPHOMORE WALLY BURNS practices the swing that beat 14 hits off Cardinal pitchers John Trinity took a five-run lead only .Wesleyan in a rainy-day field house hitting drill. Burns came Andrus and Jacques LeGette. to get rained out in Middletown. off the bench to lead the Bantams home, 8-3, with a home run,' The frosh record is 2-1 with the a double and a single. Brian Titus catches behind the indooi In the second Inning the Hill- two washed away. plate. top crew scored another run on Rich Coyle's double after singles Open by Buddy Kupka and George Min- Frosh Remain Undefeated. Senat ukas. As been Wesleyan tied it up at two apiece ing s in the fourth but a five-run sixth Oarsmen Second in Musty Callow Trini Inning clinched the Trinity victory. iousl Singles by Mike Hickey, Burns, of th< Bob Heimgartner arid Ron Martin, Wesleyan slid over the line a week from today at the annual Str. Jack DeLong 'G9 7 Morris Disston '68 I knc and a double by pitcher Minukas three-quarters of a length ahead Friends of Trinity Rowing din- dred accounted for the Trinity runs. of Trinity in the Rusty Callow ner. 6 David Knowlton '69 5 Bill Canning '69 at tl Cup Regatta last Saturday at Wor- Last year's Rusty Callow vic- going Buddy Kupka collided with Wes- cester, Mass. Regarded as the tory went to Amherst with Wes- 4 Deke August '69 leyan pitcher Andrus In the third New England small college cham- leyan second and Trinity fifth. 3 Richard Tyner '68 this inning, separating his shoulder. pionship, the Regatta was blessed The Bantams, though, salvaged 2 Nick Orem '67 and First baseman Kupka is lost for with perfect conditions the first the other contests for JV and fresh- Bow Bill Young '69 will the remaining five games and is 1970 BYE, BYE REDBIRD, ... such afternoon for the Trinity men victories. Marietta swept all replaced at first by Rich Coyle. shells this spring. three events in last year's Dad our while it is more likely that On Friday the Bantams tried Vail Regatta. easy Rowing on lake water into a I FRESHMEN Coach Dan Jessee is block- unseccessfully to launch another faint headwind, Wesleyan, who lost Wesleyan Coach Phil Cahoun Wi ing the sun from his eyes, contest, with Coast Guard, on the thiS: to the Bantams two weeks ago revealed recently in the Wesleyan Cox. Richard Dale he seems to be waving a home .field. Bob Brlckley, who after snapping a rudder and run- ARGUS his pre-Callow strategy med: wrenched his arm in the Maine Str. Dan Drury (capt.) of th solemn good-bye to his top ning aground, finished in 6:26. which eventually lead his Varsity 7 James Hubbell rivals at Middletown as he roadtrlp last week, was unable to Trinity rowed smoothly, pushing to success. Anticipating his "big in f pitch and Ron Martin took the 6 Steve Hamilton opin leaves Wesleyan's Andrus the sprint to a high 38 strokes a boat" as "the eight to beat" he 5 George Wheelwright mound for Trinity. Wally Burns minute, but was never able to said: "No race is over until the by t Field alter thirty-five years started In center. 4 Dlx Leeson as Trinity coach. pull even with the big Wesleyan last stroke...and (the) boys are shot The game went as far as the eight. going to have to row '111 they 3 Bill Newberry stru 2 Dale Reed third Inning when the traditional The Cardinals outweigh Trin- Tsleed at the ears to return with Trir Trinity rains washed away another the honors." Bow Joseph Barkley ity's varsity boat by ten pounds " " A Amherst Drops one: It was the second Coast Guard a man. contest to be cancelled this spring. new Marist and Amherst finished VARSITY fair This afternoon the Jessee play- third and fourth respectively fol- Cox. Jack Smith '67 (co-capt.) As Golf Squad ers entertain Williams at 3:15 of lowed by Clark, A.I.C., Holy Cross, Str. Peter Johnson '68 II FRESHMEN sorr o'clock. The freshmen, after a and the University of Rhode Is- 7 Bill Melcher '69 Balances Mark week's vacation, visit St. Thomas land. whi 6 John Ingram '69 Cox. 'Bear' Bellda r hop in the second game of the series The JV race was similar in many 5 Keith Pinter '69 Str. 'Lion' Liskow (Trinity won the first, April 29, ways. Although Trinity finished se- iou! The Bantam golf team evened 4 Don Callaghan '68 7 'Duck' Desseau pro its record at four wins and four 15-7). The Varsity are away on cond, they were able to row as 3 Phil Pennington '68 Friday In a game with Worcester 6 'Dlno' Davidson defeats by clobbering Amherst well as they knew how, and came 2 Caleb Fox '68 5 'Possum' Peelle 5 1/2 to 1 1/2 on Tuesday. The Tech. but return in time for the . across the line 1.8 seconds after MIT contest on Senior Ball Sat- Bow Scott Gove '67 (co-capt.) 4 'Moose' McConnell ing defeat lowered the Lord Jeff^s Amherst in 6;48.8. 3 'Spider' Maxwell let Record to three and six. '"* urday at 2:00 o'clock. The freshmen provided another JV Away from the taunts of The 2 'Snake' Sanford the At No. 1 position, Rick Stultz fine performance, finishing in Cox. Randy Gordon '69 Bow 'Chimp'' Kapilla It : defeated Warner, 1 up. Rob John- Tempatlons, the freshmen ball club 6;47.2, two lengths ahead of their tries again to complete a game wo: son, No. 2, and John Sjoholm, nearest competitor. Not only have tha No. 3, defeated their opponents they won every race that they have joi: three and one and three and two entered, but they have won each You mean, Pr respectively. These two tied for Baseball, Tennis easily by a length or more. jus low medalists of the day by fir- Trinity's second freshmen shell, * TH ing 78's. Vie Here Today the "zoo crew", rounded out the because I'm a student In the closest match of the day by soundly beating Amherst sir afternoon, Rich Tuxbury and Chris Williams and Wesleyan visit the and Marist in 6:53. or teacher I get Hibbard battled, to a standstill campus this afternoon for contests The Dad Vail, a three-day trip for 18 holes. There was no play- with the Bantam baseball, tennis, to Philadelphia and the final test off so each team was awarded and golf squads. of small college (Eastern) crews, special rates at all will take place this Friday and or, one-half point. Hugh Kenworthy The varsity diamondmen, riding De •: won his sixth match of the year, on a 2-3 record, meet the Ephmen Saturday. Last year the Bantams defeating Franklin five-four. on the Hartford hilltop at 3:15 qualified first in the 36-crew event Hilton Hotels In the U.S.? Charley Perrin, playing in the No. p.m. Meanwhile the frosh hitters and placed fifth in the Finals. . 6 position this week, was beaten (2-1), battle St. Thomas in a return Trinity's JV were third and the wi four and two by Elsenberg while bout. freshmen eighth. Bill Dickey, No. 7, defeated Sil- Trinity's fuzzballers play host In preparation for the final re- vestri 1 up. to Wesleyan at 3:30 p.m. today gatta retiring coach Arthur Gll- Hilton Hotels Corporation, The team played at Providence in what could be the closest con- creast is sprinting his shells in on Friday but was rained out be- test of the season. The Cardinals 5 00-meter stretches, and prac- National Sales Office, Palmer House, fore the match could be completed. will also send up their fresh- ticing 30-30's (power on for thirty st Trinity freshmen played their men golf team for a dual match. strokes, power off for thirty)., Chicago 90, III. first match last Friday and gained Also today, the varsity lacrosse The crews are working with three Please send the Faculty-Student cj nothing but experience as a three team (2-5) Is at Holy Cross, In new shells: two Pococks (accepted sil and three Klngswood squad beat what is slated as a "tough" match. , as the finest made and an ex- Rate Brochure that tells all. all them five to two. While the Temptations taunt the perimental Schonbrun shell). The No. 1 man Glenn Gazley easily masses in the Memorial Field experimental shell, which breaks I am a Faculty Member D Student • defeated his opponent five and House this Saturday, several Into three segments for easy trav- j three as he shot an 80, the best squads will be In action on the el, rides higher in the water and Please prim full name and address plainly. score on the Trinity squad. fields. Jessee hilltop nine will is a lighter shell than the thin- i In the tightest contest of the entertain M.I.T. at 2:00 clock; wood crafts. Consequently it needs NAME match. Marsh of Kingswood de- the lacrosse team battles U.Mass. " a heavy crew" and is not per- ; feated Ralph Glendennlng 1 up here, and the varsity track, crew fectly suited to Coach Gllcreast's HOME ADDRESS on the twentieth hole after holing a and tennis teams compete in cham- first eight. Wesleyan, with a heav- STREET six foot putt on the nineteenth to pionship contests. ier crew, Is more successful with keep the match alive. . At Bates, Trinity'.s 5-1 track a similiar experimental model. CITY STATE At the No. 7 position, Stan Rob- team competes in the Eastern With Gilcreast leaving to teach COLLEGE NAME inson lost 1 up to Holt as he while the tennis squad finishes American history at Exeter, there failed to sink a five foot par putt the season with the New Englands is much speculation as to the new on the eighteenth hole which would at Yale and the crew rows in Trinity mentor. Rumors have It STATE have sent the match into overtime. Philadelphia's Dad Vail Regatta. that the announcement will be made