Vol. 75 THE TRINITY Issue 4 TRIPOD September 28,1976 Financial Aid Office Overhauls Job Program by Peter Davis positions and keeping them on the do the others who receive these had no way of knowing why this The figures from this tally are Since the beginning oi job. forms. The authorization permits was happening," stated John summarized here: Of 370 student academic year, the Financial Aid This program differs from the the 'supervisor, upon termination Taylor, director of Financial Aid. jobs available to aid recipients, 27 Office has been in the process of procedures of previous years in of the student's employment, to By February 20, 1976, of the 320 students declined their employ- implementing a new program that the aid students who have state when and why such termina- students who had accepted job ment leaving 343 who desired a job designed primarily to increase the been awarded a job opportunity tion occurred. offers, only 248, about 76%, of award. Of this number, 87 students efficiency of the office in awarding must seek employment on their The former process of matching these students were actually either failed to obtain the author- permanent campus employment to own, provided they have the proper student with job was abandoned for working. ization sheets or failed to meet the those students on Financial Aid. authorization papers obtained several reasons, the important It is hoped that the authoriza- aforementioned deadline. This left This comprehensive Student Em- through the Financial Aid Office. being that there was really no tion sheets will help to eliminate 256 students who were to receive a ployment Program was conceived Three copies of these authorization 'system' for guaranteeing financial this communication 'void'. The job. in early 1976 in the form of a forms are given to the prospective aid job recipients a campus work results already look promising. At From the statistics compiled proposal to President Theodore employee who fills out his portion position. The office was making the the present time 237 out of 256 Wednesday, 19 of these students Lockwood and is now in its first and gives these copies to the commitment to provide such an F.A. students who __ desired a are currently unemployed, leaving stages of development. employer who then signs an agree- award, but there was no binding campus position, about 93%, are 237 aid students now on the job. Of Although the thrust of the ment with the student and returns • obligation on the part of the working. the 19 unemployed, 6 are wait- program is to guarantee a job to the the copies to the office. employer to fill such positions with The new program stresses a listed for work and 15 are fresh- financial aid student who has This permits the Financial Aid financial aid students. The office commitment on the part of the men. It should also be noted that received employment as part of his Office to determine the wage of was not functioning adequately financial aid student to secure his out of the 237, 17 students are or her overall award, it also hopes that particular student along with because there was a communica- own employment, and is therefore underemployed. The Financial Aid to establish an effective monitoring his work schedule, etc., and tion 'void' between the student, the more competitive, but the individ- Office has an obligation to see to system that would create a uniform supplies information for use in office and the employer. ual on aid who has received the" these cases, so that the problem wage model for employers and instituting the wage control pro- There was a "steady stream of promise of employment is still should be alleviated soon. insure equal wages for student gram. Finally, the office sends one students coming to the Financial given priority in the job selection Before the Sept. 22 deadline, workers. It also attempts to provide copy back to the employer, one to Aid Office to complain about being process. non-financial aid students could an improved method for matching the Payroll Office, and keeps the suddenly 'let go' from their jobs/or The procedure is thus: The receive employment only if they such students with compatible last one as a permanent record, as being 'underemployed' and "we amount of financial aid that a met certain qualifications, that is, if student receives is determined by their employer had set certain that student's need. Given that the specifications that made this stu- cost of a Trinity education runs dent essential to the operation of Poll Shows Ford The Winner about $6100 at present, subtracting some orgaization or if the student was either an R.A. or a T.A. Of the by Dr. Clyde McKee, Jr. Carter has two goals. First, he mistakes in his lineup and move- parental support, summer job 56 permanently employed non-fi- Round one of the Ford-Carter de- must discredit the Ford adminis- ments. These were errors which earnings, etc. from this gives the nancial aid students, the majority bates is over. One national survey tration. Second, he must prove that any experienced television debate office a fair idea of an applicant's are either R.A.'sorT.A.'s. found that 39 percent thought he can do a substantially better job coach could have corrected. First, need. President Ford won the debate; 31 as chief executive that Ford. he repeatedly broke eye contact by The award comprises three These non-aid people required percent believed Governor Carter The 70 to 100 million judges in a looking down at notes. Next, he methods of allocation funds to the authorizations as their positions was the victor; and 30 percent was presidential debate differ greatly used inappropriate hand gestures needy student: a grant, which is were considered permanent, but undecided. Another national sur- in intelligence, understanding of -that made his finger tips pop in and straight allocation of money, a the office permitted a certain the subject matter, political bias, out of close-up scenes. He failed to loan, to repaid within ten years amount of leeway in processing vey found that 70 percent of those ; who see themselves as Republicans and general interest. Each has a stare at his opponent during critical after graduation, or a job. On-cam- these forms, letting them work thought Ford the winner as op- different score card, which may be verbal exchanges. A side angle pus employment and loan consti- before the procedure was com- pleted. The Financial Aid Office is posed to 55 percent of the completed before the debate be- shot during the middle of the tute the Financial Aid Office's currently not involved in the democrats who felt that Carter had gins. Also, in a 90 minute, debate caught him slouching a 'self-help' program and the aver- selection process of R.A.'s and scored more points. late hour televised debate, dis- little. He looked older than Ford. age amount that a student can earn Ford and Carter scored equally T.A.'s but would like to soon have a Listeners of a Hartford-area rupted by technical problems, in this fashion is $1000, usually well on their knowledge of the hand in it. radio station scored the debate 51 points scored early count more than divided equally between loan and issues, but the President expressed Within the non-aid category percent, Carter; 47 percent, Ford; those scored later because the job. himself better. In conceptualizing were those students who were and 2 percent undecided. A number of judges declines and From the beginning of the the issues, Ford had a sharper under temporary employment dur- majority of a group of debate interest wanes. academic year to Wednesday, focus, was more specific, and ing the aid priority period. These coaches judged Carter the winner. Recognizing that presidential Sept. 22, all students on financial debates are unique contests, what demonstrated better unity of ideas. aid who had been awarded a job people did not require authoriza- But political science students at tion to bev employed, but were Trinity College voted President are some of the common guide- position and who had the proper Carter began too many re- aware that they might Jose their job Ford the better debater by a lines which were used to determine authorization were given the op- sponses with "Well," tried to status on Sept, 22 if an aid-student margin of two to one. a winner? Assuming that most of portunity to secure employment for us witnessed the debate by tele- develop too many ideas at too high themselves and to notify the office could fill the same position. What standards should we use a level of abstraction, spoke too Therefore, only financial aid stud- to evaluate a presidential debate? vision rather than radio, physical of their job situation by said date. appearance was of primary import- fast, and used too few specific After this date, no appeals for ents and those students specially First, we need to recognize that the qualified to work could receive ance. Did he look healthy, strong, examples. increased aid on the basis of lack of Ford-Carter debates are very dif- Both candidates failed to pre- authorizations during this period. ferent from the college debates forceful, virile, and honest? semester employment were to be Next, did he know what he was sent a clearly defined, solid politi- accepted. However, those who filled out with which many of us are familiar. cal and economic orientation to- job request forms at registration or In collegiate debates the parti- talking about, understand the Last Wednesday was a crucial issues of the campaign, and did he wards the major domestic issues date in determining the success of at any later date received an cipants are playing a game. They facing our nation. Both said they authorization form permitting them stand as equals at the same place. discuss the facts related to the this new Student Employment major concerns facing the Amer- were going to reduce taxes, lower Program. The information com- to seek permanent employment on They have common objectives. inflation, stimulate the economy, Monday, September 27. In this Their judges, who are identified ican people? piled on that day would accurately Third, did the candidate have a improve employment opportun- tell how many financial aid stu- way, all students actively seeking and whole biases are often know, employment are eventually given clearly defined point of view, a Continued on Page 2 dents were presently employed. score the contest by established the opportunity to do so. rules. political orientation that reveals The fact that the system is not For obvious reasons a debate what he will do if elected Presi- yet operating smoothly was dem- between presidential candidates is dent? Did he respond well when onstrated during the two-day a unique contest. The stakes are under attack. period it took to organize the last much higher and the risks greater. And finally, did he have an payroll, as there were two time The objective is the Office of entertaining style. In a close sheets with which to contend. One President, Commander-in-Chief of contest, points scored in these last was the permanent tirnesheet the United States, not a silver two categories are particularly which presumably should have loving cup for the mantel. significant. Using the above criteria, how contained only those authorized aid In these presidential contests students on the job and any Ford and Carter do not stand on did Ford and Carter do in their first debate held in Philadelphia, permanently employed non-aid equal footing. Ford as an incum- students. The other was a tempor- bent has reports and policy experts September 23rd? Ford looked more impressive than Carter. The Presi- ary timesheet, which did not need which are not available to the other authorization. The confusion re- candidates. dent took full advantage of his size. He stood erect, spread his arms, sulted from numerous non-author- The goals of the incumbent gripped the sides of the rostrum as ized names getting on the perman- differ from those of the challenger. if it were the bow of the ship of ent timesheet. This in turn held up Ford wants to increase popular state, and held this pose through- its processing by computer which support for the sentiment that he is out the debate. He followed the led to a delay in certain people doing a successful job as president instructions of his debate coaches receiving their paychecks. and should not be removed on in this respect. Community House members, Neil, Chipp, Jim, Lisa, Keith and Carl Contionued on Page 4 November 2nd. Carter made some serious assemble outside of 216 New Britain. by CarlCljerriera page 2, The Trinity Tripod, September 28,1976 Ford Outpolls Carter Continued from Page 1 system. Carter disagreed and said prepared to go for Ford's political he favored a chairman whose term jugular vein. Had Carter moved ities, and cut federal quickly, incisively, and with proper spending. Either they do not under- of office coincided with that of the President. Carter also said that he understatement, he could have stand basic economic theory or they greatly influenced the debate and were intellectually dishonest. favored executive reorganization of the structure of our federal govern- perhaps have influenced the out- Most political and economic come of the election. experts expect taxes and inflation ment and would use zero-based Carter was seriously hurt by the r to increase no matter who is budgeting as a method to cut loss of audio communication. He elected. For example, there is the programs that could not be justi- should have insisted that his problem of $4 trillion that must be fied. Ford reaffirmed his faith in a question be restated and that he be raised for the unfunded Social system of separation of powers, given full time to respond. His Security program. checks and balances. In short, here firmness on this matter would have The candidates came closest to there was a choice between cen- gotten as much attention as the being clear on political orientation tralized, strengthened executive substance of his remarks. Justice when they discussed Arthur Burns, authority and the continuation of a and public sentiment would have head of the Federal Reserve Board. fragmented system that frustrates been on his side. Ford said he favored an "indepen- the execution of presidential dent" head of our monetary authority. Finally, both candidates failed for a rather tedious affair. Carter's Both candidates missed a vari- to capitalize on the generally dull admission of "adultery in the ety of opportunities to score in the format of their contest. Both Ford heart" during the interview for refutation portion of the debate. and Carter had numerous opport- Playboy Magazine, if handled TOP Marches On Part of the blame for this failure unities to demonstrate wit, humor, properly could have been used may be placed on the rules imposed comic relief and style. Had either effectively by either side. At least by Jim Davenport of days before the trip, earlier for by the League of Women Voters, taken advantage of these opportun- more viewers might have been overnights) and sign up for which- the sponsors of the debate. Neither ities, he would have not only scored encouraged to watch the next , . Hear ye! Hear ye! Calling all ever trips interest you. candidate was permitted to fire valuable points but provided relief debate. bikers, hikers, campers, skiers, An instructional for people questions or respond directly to rock-climbers, Whitewater fans, interested in backpacking and issues raised by the opponent. ANALYSIS OF STUDENT SCORING OF FORD-CARTER DEBATE AT TRINITY COLLEGE and all other outdoorsy folk. The equipment selection and care will The closest they came to direct Trinity Outing Program has been be held September 30th. There will Approximately 100 political science students at Trinity College were response was the charge by Carter asked to score the first of the Ford-Carter debates and determine the winner. organized to serve you and we try be several good Films and Dave that Ford had vetoed more legisla- Each student was also asked to indicate if he or she was identified with the to keep everyone happy. Lee will bless the crowd with his tion than any other president. Ford Republican or Democratic parties; was a member of a conservative, liberal, The T.O.P. attempts to organ- information and advice. This is a responded that this was not true. or social organization; and was male or female. ize trips (day and longer) for all good time for all interested people He then said his vetoes were The results were the following: forms of outdoor activity. Included to learn more about the Outing caused by a fiscally irresponsible 1. President Ford won the debate by a margin of 2 to 1. in our present repertoire is hiking, Club and meet other members. The Democratic Party, whose party 2. All of those who judged Carter the winner were Democrats and saw camping, cross-country skiing, can- program will be in the Washington platform Carter endorsed, that $ themselves as liberals. 3. President Ford got more Democratic votes than Republican votes. oeing and kayaking, rock-climbing, Room at 7:30. controlled Congress. Carter re- 4. No student Republican voted Governor Carter the winner. bicycling, and snowshoeing, In A large sale of Eastern Moun- torted that if he was going to be tain Sports equipment is planned 5. All the students who saw themselves as conservatives voted for addition to the recreational trips, held responsible for a Democratic President Ford. T.O.P. provides instructional pro- for the week after Open Period. All Congress of which he was not part, 6. More students who identified themselves as liberal voted for Ford than grams and a center for environ- types of equipment will be avail- then Ford would have to accept . voted for Carter. mental awareness and activities. able (hiking, rock-climbing, camp- responsibility for Watergate by a The votes of the students who saw .themselves as socialists were T.O.P. has already conducted ing, skiing, etc.) at a 20% discount Republican Party of which he was a divided between Ford and Carter. two instructional programs on to T.O.P. members (15% for part. In traditional terms, this was 8. President Ford captured nearly all of the female vote as winner of the rock-climbing, September 7th and non-members). This is the time to the high point in the debate. debate. 9. The students who saw the debate as a draw or tie score (approximately 9th. To put their newly-found pick up your equipment at bargain Carter missed a major debating knowledge to the test, several prices, so make sure to pick up a 9, The students who saw the debate as a draw or tie score (approximately opportunity that might have 19 percent) tended to be male, Democratic liberals. Trinity folk made excursions to few extra dollars if you go home changed the Final scores of mil- Ragged Mountain for some serious over the Open Period. lions of viewers. Although it would climbs. For anyone interested in be- have been inappropriate for him to There are dayhikes planned for coming a T.O.P. member, a full raise the issue of Ford's alleged Lovejoy Speaks most weekends, rock-climbing ev- year membership costs three dol- illegal Congressional campaign ery weekend, overnights once in a lars. This can be paid at Thursday's contributions, cited in John Dean's while, and occasional canoeing and meeting or at the Office of Student new book, and the current inves- kayaking trips. The big overnight Services upstairs in Mather at tigations of the Security and Ex- Against Nukes to Mt. Washington is scheduled for anytime during the week. change Commission into Ford's Winner of countless awards, the upcoming Open Period, ; Members are offered several questionable relationships with the by Seth Price "Lovejpy's Nuclear War" has been All these trips can be very advantages. They are given a U.S. Steel Corporation, these In February, 1974, he toppled a followed by a symposium entitled enjoyable.. .but.. .we need your par- discount on equipment rental (lo- ' issues could be discussed once tower. Six months later the courts SAM LOVEJOY on NUCLEAR ticipation to make these plans come cated in the Mather basement sign introduced by the opponent. to: life! Anyone, even non-T.O.P. shop), trip cost, and given an extra decided that there had been a valid POWER, CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE members, may sign up for these 5% discount on equipment sales. Ford provided the opportunity reason for the toppling and acquit- and the POLITICS OF ENERGY. trips.1 AH one has to do is go to the In addition, some trips and rental when he initiated the issue of ted him of "willful and malicious Refreshments will be served at the Mather front desk before, the equipment are limited to T.O.P. Congressional ethics and respon- destruction of personal property." end of the program, sign-up deadline (usually a couple members only. " sibility. Carter should have been Now, two years later, Sam Lovejoy praised by Harpers Magazine as comes to Trinity. having a "stunning instinct for Co-feponsored by WRTC-FM asking the most fundamental and and the Energy Education Commit- disturbing questions possible about tee of Trinity College, Lovejoy will the intersection between private T.W.O. Establishes Center lives and politics." Winner of the be on campus for a day of Best Political Film award at the by Paula Swilling interviews and lectures Thursday, new Women's Center. society. All interested persons are September 30. San Francisco International Film Festival, the film has also been After several years of precar- At the T.W.O. meeting held invited to become involved. The day begins with an inter- praised by Variety, the Village ious existence, the Trinity Wom- Monday evening, Sept. 20, about A top priority is the problem view on WRTC at 4:00 P.M. Hosted Voice, and other publications. en's Organization has finally found 35-40 upperclasspersons, faculty, regarding the sad lack of gyneco- by Trinity's Randy Pearson, Love- a core of strength in the creation of and staff members expressed en- logical services offered to Trinity joy will be questioned about his The film deals with the many a Women's Center on campus. thusiasm for this new development women. This situation is regarded feelings concerning the increasing varying points of view regarding At the end of last spring, and offered suggestions as to to be not only an insult to every use of nuclear power. Also present nuclear power. The issues of civil several women composed a letter to activities and uses of the Center. woman on campus, but physically at the interview will be "Mother disobedience and the politics of the administration of the college 1 Besides maintaining a women s and psychologically dangerous as Lightning" from WHUS radio in energy are drawn together to demanding a facility for the use of library and a sort of drop-in center, well. explain what motivated Lovejoy to women on campus-—a place from Storrs, representatives of the Con- T.W.O. hopes to foster conscious- At present, there is a gynecolo- topple the Massachusetts weather which programs of women's inter- necticut Citizen Action Group and ness-raising groups- for Trinity gist in the Medical Office for one tower and to see why he was then est could be organized, a library of from the People's Action for Clean women and discussion groups for hour per week. With women Energy. subsequently acquitted. The movie women's literature could be main- all members of the Trinity com- populating nearly one half of this tained and which could better the After the interview, the group manages to be objective, giving the munity interested in discussing college, this is simple negligence. will move on the McCook Auditor- views of both proponents and lives of Trinity women by offering feminist issues. Peer counseling To call for an appointment with the them a place to go to talk to other ium for a showing of Lovejoy's film critics of the growing reliance on and gynecological self-help clinics doctor and get one in four to six "Nuclear War" which is, to be nuclear power. women about the experience of are also in the planning stages. weeks is outrageous—a woman is being female in the world and at forced to seek gynecological advice Trinity. As a result of that letter, an From the "home base" of the elsewhere, which is unfair and also apartment at 88 Crescent Street Women's Center, T.W.O. also expensive.. There is also a feeling had been allocated for use as the plans to do many things to benefit the wider community. Among shared by many Trinity women that the present doctors are unfeeling The Trinity, TRIPOD, vol. 75, these are plans to bring lectures and films of feminist interest to the and incompetent. To rectify this ssue 4, September 28, 1976. The situation, T.W.O. is pushing to TRIPOD is published weekly on campus, and to sponsor another Tuesdays, except vacations, during Feminist Arts Week. A weekly expand visiting hours and replace the academic year. Student sub- radio show is also in the works. All the present doctors with women. scriptions are included in the of these activities will be open to AH of these activities will get student activities fee; other sub- the general public. firmly underway with the estab- scriptions are $12.00-per year. The lishment of the Women's Center. It TRIPOD is printed by the '.aimer On campus, several women will is hoped that freshman and soph- Journal Register, Palmer, Mass., be offering a course titled "Ama- omore women will also get invol- and published at Trinity College, zon Aesthetics" through the Free ved, to help provide a sense of Hartford, Conn, 06106. Second- University, The course is scheduled class postage paid in HartfoTd, continuity in the community. Any- to meet once a week for six weeks one who would be interested in Connecticut, tfhder the Act of to explore such issues as the March 3, 1879. Advertising rates helping to paint and organize the historical role of women, women arc $2.00 per column inch, $35. per Center or do a wall mural is more and art, current female self-images quarter page, $65. per half page, thanwelcome—contactSusan Pann, and self-expressions, and in gener- and S123. for a full-page. Box 1012; 525-5258, or watch for al, a perspective of the woman in signs. September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page 3 Candidates State Views On Elections by Bob Hnrlock comprised of four committees: the therefore, we must not be under- Fred Schwartz '80 duties included formulating and In a recent SGA vote, the policy Concert & Dance Committee, Small represented. By becoming a mem- I would like to become a working with a $12,000 budget, and concerning membership on the Activities Committee, Lecture ber of SGA I will make sure that member of the Student Govern- knows how to present a budget and Mather Hall Board of Governors Committee, and the Cultural Activ- your views and ideas are fully ment Association (S.G.A.) for its p'rograms, and substantiate (MBOG) was changed. Positions on ities Committee. represented. several reasons. First, I feel a receiving the money, then vote for MBOG had formerly been elected Petitions for MBOG member- David Deacon personal motivation to help im- Carl Guerriere for the Budget positions, but under the new ship will be accepted beginning My name is David Deacon and prove Trinity College since I am a Committee policy, membership on the Board Friday, October 1. All membership I'm running for a freshman position member of the student body. Meredith Mainhardt only requires a petition signed by petitions are to be submitted to on S.G.A. I'm running because I Second, I enjoy working with other The College Affairs Committee forty full-time, undergraduate stu- P.O. Box 1388. enjoy student government and I people to help solve common lends itself to the discussion of dents of Trinity College. JeffBaird know that I can do a good job for problems. Finally, I am anxious to ideas and problems by those who Potential members are remind- I feel that the freshman class you. have a say in the way our school is compose Trinity College due to its run and to represent the student ed to specify which committee of needs a loud voice in student Robert Herbst'80 composition of students, faculty, MBOG they would like to be a government. Our class is one of the body as best as possible. Thank you and administrators. As a senior at All around us there is the cry for your support. member of. MBOG is presently largest '.ever to enter Trinity; that we are apathetic, that we don't Trinity College, 1 have spent two care. There is the thought among Andy Teitz years here and my junior year some that we can't do anything If I am elected, I will try to solve attending another American insti- Sample Ballot anyway, so why bother to worry. I the problems that I see already, tutttion. Not only do I have new and don't believe in this, I feel that the such as overcrowding, ineffective refreshing ideas to offer, I believe I The elections will be hold on people of Trinity can accomplish student government, and rampant am acutely aware of our Trinity Thursday, September 30 and Friday, Community problems. I hope to October 1 between tiit* hours of what they work for under a apathy. In addition I will work to a.m. and 6 |i.n. in "Mather concerned leadership. Accordingly, expose our other hidden problems propose change in the area of I feelthat the student body should and resolve them. If you want an security; to broaden its scope be able to voice an opinion and to open, honest, and productive stu- within the dorms and the college- have the power to implement dent government, then vote for me. campus itself. Through and with FHESHflAN l-L AU.-COLLIXt; LXLCT.IONS student sentiment into action on Carl Gnerriere the committee I am willing to aid in those subjects within the jurisdic- If you want someone who is the organization and efficiency of the new and up and coming Student Government Connl'lKG: tion of the Student Government sincerely concerned about the (votu for 6, elect age 4, The Trinity Tripod, September; Campus Employment Favors Aid Students Continued from Page 1 this date those who still remain summer to discuss the possibility of It hoped that this ad hoc some time in the spring, it should This was specifically a Payroll misinformed will have their pay- wage control. committee will be reinstated as an definitely be available to incoming Office problem as they were check withheld by the Financial Aid According to one of the student Employment Advisory Council freshmen next fall. landling only the permanent time- Office until they pick it up members of the committee, consisting of students, employers, In addition there are now ;heet. By the nature of the personally. numerous hiring departments in and a few select administrators temporary work list cards available lilemma, however, it involved As was stated above, this the college community have agreed such as the Treasurer, Dean of for anyone interested in working financial Aid as well, The Office program hoped to implement some to conform to some kind of Faculty, and the Vice-President. for a few hours in miscellaneous ixpects this problem to continue form of uniform wage model for standard wage. This program is In regard to the third goal of the jobs. Employers on and off-campus mtil everyone has adjusted to the providing equitable wages to stu- still in its planning phases and, if program (helping students find are asked to give one week lew system. A deadline of Oct. 15 dent workers. Such a model should successful, will eliminate many jobs with which they are compat- notification of any job opening to i as been settled upon as the final be in effect around January 1977, complaints lodged by students who ible and keeping them on that job) the Financial Aid Office. A notice is late for employees to learn how to An ad hoc committee comprised of ' felt they were being paid an unfair the office plans to make several posted on a bulletin board in the bllow this system properly; after students and employers met this wage. routine checks of the student office, and both the student and the employment situation during the employer are contacted a reason- year, obtaining written material able length of time before the from employers describing their assignment if the student is Davis Joins Trinity Counselors relationships with individual stu- matched to a certain period of dents workers. employment. by Jeff Steiner emphatically opposed to being Davis, once an aspiring teacher, Such information would have a The entire program seems The college counsellors, Randy considered a "women's counsel- completed a B.A. in English at dual purpose: to provide useful' successful to the people at Finan- ^ee and George Higgins, will again lor." She pointed out that she Dennison University as an under- feedback to the program itself and cial Aid as evidenced by the >e aided by an outside graduate found it not more difficult to relate graduate. She said that in many to be utilized as future reference increased success rate. Although itudent. This year, Adelle Davis, a to men's problems than to wom- ways Trinity reminded her of sources for post-graduate employ- non-financial aid workers may feel ;econd year Masters candidate at en's. Dennison, also a small liberal arts ers. With the institution of this irritated in being edged out of job he University of Hartford, joins Lee summed up the counsel- college. It was at Dennison that program, more responsibility is competition by financial aid stu- he counsellors in their new Vernon lor's attitude when he said, "The Davis first developed an interest in placed on the employer and the dents, this practice has always Jtreet offices. more counsellors your have, the working with people on a small worker to keep that particular been in effect, the difference being Davis, said she, is eager to help more options you give to the group basis. "But you know," she student in a particular job. that how it has been made public. >eople, but added that she was people." j quipped, "that you can not make a The supervisor is obligated While the priority system has career out of things you enjoy." to return whatever materials are always been in effect, Financial Aid After deciding that teaching required to the Financial Aid is presently trying to make it more Lestz Encourages was not the proper outlet for her Office. The employer has the right effective. More time will be talents, Davis worked briefly as a to fire any student if there are needed to determine all the effects children's librarian before enrol- adequate grounds for dismissal and of this new program, but according Asian Learning ling at UHart. She mentioned that the office is not required to find the to Mr. Taylor, "If this proposal is after completing her degree work, student new employment. approved, and we decide to go by Linda Scott which include the Tai Chi course she hoped one day to return to a Presently, a comprehensive ahead, I look forward to a challeng- Michael Lestz, graduated from offered by the dance department, college campus as a full time Student Employment Guide is in ing first year but know that, given >inity as a history major in 1968, are as diversified as his interests in counsellor. the making. Although it will time, a program of this type can be nd has returned to the deparment history. Asked about her goals at probably not be completed until sucessful." his year to teach 'Late Imperial Trinity, Davis said, "I think we (the Chinese History' and a freshman counsellors) are here to enrich the eminar on Twentieth Century Classics lives of the students. All three of us ?hina. are committed to adjusting our FCCS Complements After graduating, he entered style to meet the specific needs of le army, and was stationed in Adds Prof. those who come to see us." lorea. It was there that he became by Robery Levy iterested in Asian Studies. He Dr. Anne Zartarian, a Visiting Lee and she are now in the Counselling Off ice orked in Washington for some Assistant Professor, is the newest process of designing a Personal me and took Chinese with -the member of the Trinity Classics' Growth Group at Trinity. This lepartment of Agriculture. He Department. would be a small group of people, len went on to Yale graduate After teaching at Trinity for one not necessarily with specific prob- by Betsy Gildersleeve better able to manage and advise a chool where he pursued East week, she said that she "likes lems, who desire to explore their The Faculty Career Counselling student body, which is broken ^sian Studies." Trinity very much." Born and personalities in the hope of self- Service (FCCS) which . provides down into small, common interest In addition to teaching his raised outside of Philadelphia, enrichment. faculty advisors for students with groups, he said. ;ast Asian courses, he is the Zartarian received her Undergrad- questions concerning majors or Recent publications on job iudget coordinator of the Inter- uate and Masters Degree at the Among her personal interests career choices has been instituted information, as well as guest ?ultural Studies program at Trin- University of Pennsylvania, and Davis counts nature, camping, and this year. At least one faculty professional speakers and return- "Artsy Craftsy" sorts of things. In member from each department will ing alumni professionals will be :y- went on to take her PhD. at the University of North Carolina. Her a more contemplative mood she participate in the program. available to advisees. "Together He plans to start a film series overriding interest is in Greek and enjoys writing poetry. She has The FCCS is designed to help with the regular Faculty Advisory oon about China, and said he Greek epigraphy, which is the played tennis "about four times" direct students to the best source of System and the Parent Alumni /outd also like to instigate a study of ancient inscriptions on but does not believe she has information for their questions. Dr. Career Advising System there veek-end symposium concerning stone. mastered the game yet. "Gener- Chris Shinkman, director of Career should be a wide assortment of he arts of China, Japan and India. ally," she smiles, "I am open to At Trinity, Zartarian is teaching Counselling, said. "We would like resources available to every stu- Returning to Trinity after eight anything new and exciting at least the new program to act as a dent," explained Shinkman. years, Lestz finds, students have Beginning Latin and The Roman once." . Novel this semester, and next complementary arrangement with The following list names the changed. The major change, he Career Counselling." In this way,: faculty advisors and the academic said, has been the addition of semester, she will teach a course about Homer. She said that finds students can be referred to a departments they represent. If females, which has helped to Murray Finds variety of informed people with interested, students are encour- balance and diversify the student that the students here are enthusi- astic about learning as well as different ideas and advice, he aged to contact the advisors body. He also sees a relaxation of added. Career Counselling is also social codes that used to prevail. being conscious of the importance Students Active directly at their offices. of security. Today, Lestz said he would like Besides instructing Classics, to see more Trinity students learn Zartarian's interests include need- by Diane Molleson about Asia. In particular, he would lepoint, reading, fishing, and es- New to the psychology depart- FACULTY CAREER COUNSELORS * 19F6 like to have Chinese taught as a pecially cooking. She also works for ment is Pauline Murray, a part- foreign language. The Asian Stud- the Children's Museum in West time lecturer presently teaching ies department has grown, and Hartford. one course this fall semester 1. American Studies -Professor Eugene E. Leach, Seabury-12E, x489 along with,it, students' interest in Since Zartarian only has a one entitled."Theories of Personality." 2. Biology - Professor Craig W, Schneider. Life Science Center-2;>3. x33b Chinese and other related areas. year commitment to Trinity, it is Murray said that she had good 3. Chemistry - Professor John C. Williams. Seaburv-44B, x201 An avid cyclist and runner, difficult for her to formulate any first impressions of Trinity, and Michael Lestz cycles to work each long-range goals. She said that she finds her students "enthusiastic, 4. Classics - Professor John C. Williams, Seabury-44B, x201 day, and is a cross-country coach i would very much like to continue' interested in learning and actively 5. Dance • Professor- Judy Dworin. Seabury-48. x250 or x414 looking forward to a successful teaching, preferably at the college contributing to the class." Murray 6. Economics - Professor Charles W. Lindsev. Williams Memorial-302. x451 season. His outside interests, level. added that she was "quite impres- 7. Economics • Professor Diane C. Zannoni. Williams Memorial-304. x2S4 sed with the psychology' depart- ment" here. 8. Education - Professor LeBaran C. Moseby. MeCook-324, x372 Ptinity Welcomes Bonnice After receiving a B.A. from 9. Engineering - Professor August E. Sapega, Hallden, x202orx456 Connecticut College, • Murray pur- 10. Fine Arts - Professor Michael R. T. Mahoney, Austin Arts Center-311. x 230 or x4lS by Kevin Childress Trinity College, though, has signed sued graduate studies in psycho- Visiting Professor William Bonnice on for only one year, in logy. She received an M.A. from I i. History - Professor Ronald Spencer. Downes Memorial-202, x290 Bonnice came to Trinity College order to handle the extra duties Wesleyan and a Ph.D. from the 12. Intcrcultural Studies -Professor James A, Miller, Seabury-25A, x477 this term so that he might be near anticipated with the larger than University of Connecticut. Present- 13. Mathematics - Professor Marjorie V, Butcher, McCook-318, x347 his wife who is in her second year usual freshman class. Bonnice said ly she is working on her doctorate 14. Modern Languages - Professor Carl V. Hansen, Seabury42A, x283 of medical school at the University that he would enjoy staying at in clinical • psychology at the. of Connecticut's Health Center. Trinity if arrangements could be University of Connecticut. 15. Music - Professor Clarence H. Barber, Austin Arts Center-103, x258 or x463 or x250 Coming from his last teaching made. Previously, Murray taught at 16. Philosophy - Professor Howard DeLong, 70 Vernori St., x482 position at the University of New Bonnice's prime interests are Wesleyan and Eastern Connecticut 17. Physical Education - Professor Chester H. McPhee, Ferris Athletic Center, x437 Hampshire, Bonnice said he is his wife and two girls; Rana aged 3 State College. She said she enjoys 18. Physics-Professor Brooke Gregory, McCook-206, x368 impressed with Trinity students and Ayshe, 6. Bonnice met Canan teaching and finds it "stimulating 19. Political Science • Professor Gary C. Jacobson, Seabury-12C. x267 and is enjoying the less formal while teaching at U.N.H. She was and enjoyable." In addition to atmosphere between students and then working on her Ph.D. in teaching, Murray has done much 20. Psychoipgy - Professor Andrew Baum, Life Science Center-209, x418 teachers. Bonnice, offering courses organic biology. They have held research in clinical psychology. 21. Psychology - Professor Alan M. Fink, Life Science Center-201, x315 in calculus and computers, said, various teaching positions in the Recently, she did a study on 22. Religion • Professor John A. Gettier. 70 Verhon St., x379 "so far it has been a very stimu- U.S., Canada, and Hungary since aggression in elementary school lating experience and I expect they were married. 23. Sociology - Professor John D. Brewer. Life Science Center-230. x440 nothing different in the future." children,.and has also done re- Bonnice did his undergraduate search on stigma in mental illness. 24. Theatre Arts • Professor Roger D. Shoemaker. Austin Arts Center-226, x443 or x250 His only future plans are to stay work at Syracuse University and Ideally, Murray hopes to combine 25. Urban & Environmental - Professor Andrew J. Gold, McCook-320, x412 in the Hartford area until Canan, received both his M.S. and Ph.D. her teaching career with a private his' wife, finishes her schooling. from the University of Washington. practice in clinical psychology. 26. English -Professor Dirk Kuyk, Seabur-24B. x205 September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page 5 Alternative Classrooms House Students by Hugh Drescher wine and cheese parties. as a class project for the course tend to become affiliated with phere on campus. Two of the less traditional The purpose of the dorm is to "Community" taught by Philo- "psyche" groups (small groups The "house" has arranged with =£-'classrooms" at Trinity can be immerse .the students in French sophy Professor Bill Puka. Working that emphasize their particular Elinor Tilles and Raoul Crandall, found in the dorms themselves. and, thereby, maintain or improve together with other interested stu- special interest). Pointing out that director of Buildings and Grounds, This. year there are two major their fluency of the language. Once dents and Elinor Tilles, dean of these groups rarely interact with to convert the storage room of 216 alternative living programs on in the dorm they must speak only housing, they established the cur- each other, they said they hoped to NB into a lounge. Not only will the campus that embody educational French. As resident Vicky Elmblad rent living situation of eight people alleviate this polarization by spon- lounge be used for people to aims: the French dorm located on noted, "As soon as I walk into the in three apartments at 216 New soring activities that interest a congregate, but it is also the place the main floor of Jackson and the hall the French starts going; I even Britain Ave. broader share of the Trinity where many activities will be held. Community House at 216 New start to think in French." She and The philosophy of community Communitv. Among various DlansJieiae consid- Britain Ave. The overall reaction of Diane Molleson, both sophomores, living inherently expects a greater the residents of these projects is agreed that "It's like being in a sense of responsibility that would a somewhat mixed but on the whole little part of France, and you are regular dorm. The residents try to .quite positive. forced to make yourself under- eat as many meals together as The French dorm, comprised stood." Several students observed possible (the apartments are equip- of 13 students from non-freshman that the program was definitely ped with kitchen facilities), and the classes, was initiated by Dr. educational. cooking responsibilities are shared Michael Pretina, professor of mod- "It's really too early to make by all the residential members. ern languages at Trinity, who also any judgements," said sophomore "What we really need is a house," serves as its "concierge". Dr. Alex Price. "It has its good and bad said Chipp Gardner. A house, they Sonia Lee, associate professor of points." Price, who lives in the agreed, would provide a better modern languages, also at Trinity, four-man suite, stated that a big atmosphere for community living screened most of that applicants, problem was that people from and promote more of a feeling of making sure that each knew how to outside the dorm were always in togetherness. hold a simple French conversation. the room. He noted that this was in The educational goals of the The French dorm is, in a sense, itself no great evil, but that it forces Community House are less appar- a separate entity from all of them to relinquish their French for ent than those of the French dorm. Jackson and organizes their own the sake of politeness. "By and Its purpose, said resident Jonathan activities. For example, the dorm large it's a good idea," he Goodwin, "is to provide an alter- will entertain an organist from concluded, "and it will probably native living situation where people !otre Dame (in Paris) when she work out in the end.'' can interact together in a more comes to Trinity in the near future The Community House was meaningful and sharing manner." and will also hold several French begun last spring by three students The residents noted that students McCarthy Lives: McCarthy that can be found on the national coverage. McCarthy com- state campuses of Madison, Wis- plains that the press is treating him consin, Ann Arbor, Michigan, and simply as a "spoiler". Boulder, Colorado. McCarthy and his staff are But while these traditional going after that large mass of hotbeds of student activism are registered voters who generally do encouraging to McCarthy, at mo not vote. In the last presidential colleges there is little organization election, nearly half the voters did or interest in his campaign. not cast ballots. Counting on secret Some students respect McCar- supporters who "will surface in thy for his quixotic battle against October," McCarthy is confident what they feel is an unjust system. that he can win the election, said In Texas, the day after McCarthy's Yeager. name was ruled ineligible on the Or at least, "we'll be able to ballot, the. Daily Texan editorial- throw it into the House of Repre- ized: "McCarthy is now restricted sentatives," he added. In that to a write-in campaign in Texas. case, McCarthy will bargain with The Community House ts in tiie ered are: Craft exhibits, yoga Who's that man barnstorming The judges' sticky fingerprints will the "most willing candidate" to process of becoming a funded classes, jazz and folk jams, a coffee college campuses and civic halls" be smeared all over the election have leverage in the selection of student organization. All members' house, plays, lectures, and work- from coast to coast? results." the next administration's person- of the Trinity Community (includ- shops. As if the decreased political nel. ing faculty and administration) are Both of the alternative living To the Carterized Democrats eligible to join the organization and projects are looked upon very he's a bitter nuisance; to the activity among his natural constitu- But for now, it's a lonely bunch ency isn't bad enough, McCarthy that mills around different states. participate in any functions the favorably by students and admin- splintered Republicans he's a Community House holds. This istration, and seem to be footholds potential boon; to the mass media must also wrestle with media that They politely collect signatures on are geared towards the two-party behalf of a man whom most voters organization will hopefully help to of progress in the quality of campns he's a Stassenesque novelty; and to create a more harmonious atmos- residential life. many students he's a ghostly hero system and which give him little have forgotten. j of the sixties. But to a small yet •' active band of disaffected voters, former Senator Eugene J. McCar- thy remains the "Silver Knight." Post Mao China: Prospects For The Future Billing himself as an inde- by Russell D. Yang Flowers Campaign, the Great Leap man of the political science depart- prove. Mao condemned Russia's pendent "anti-waste" candidate, Although the death of China's Forward, or the Great Proletariat ment, wrote in The West Hartford "social imperialism" over border McCarthy is making his third bid Chairman Mao Tse-tung had long Cultural Revolution. The failure of News (Sept. 16,1976): "After Mao, skirmishes and then counteracted for the presidency this fall, his first been expected, September 16, 1976 these campaigns indicated that A Crisis of Authority" that "a by welcoming Richard Nixon to since bolting the Democratic Party shocked the world. In the wake of Mao had not attracted the intel- crisis of authority in China today China. three years ago. his death, Mao has left China lectuals, artists, writers, and hist- and the leadership is divided, not i The bulk of the senator's floundering in an internal power orians with his ideology and that only by national priorities, but by The ideological differences support is drawn from the ranks of struggle, wavering with economic his greatest support and source of personal animosities, rivalries and which stood between Russia and stjdents, as was the case in 1968, instability, and wondering about its power lay with the peasants and jealousies." China now have a greater chance of ^^according to Jamie Yeager, McCar- being resolved. In the future, 1 international politics. the Army. Despite these massive The power struggle is the result 1 tHy's press secretary. setbacks, Mao emerged each time Sino-American ties will also be- Regardless of political beliefs, of two conflicting factions which come stronger. Lestz noted that if thy's press secretary. But, as Mao's life and accomplishments with his personal image unscathed .-L^eager is quick to point out, this differ as to what strategy China China does become more industri- demand respect. Through sheer and integrity intact. should follow to become a more f election year is a far cry from '68, However, Mao Tse-tung's rise alized, then it would be in her best personal determination, Mao was powerful, modern state: The "re- interests to improve Chinese-Am- when thousands would throng to able to overcome the disastrous to power was not accomplished hear McCarthy attack the Vietnam visionists" desire a strong econ- erican relations. Lestz also ob- Long March, Satlin's abortive easily or peacefully. Guineas Book omic base with rapid industriali- War. Today, the political climate at of World Records notes "the served that only ideological and not attempts to undermine his leader- zation using Soviet models and practical obstacles will block this most colleges is subdued, and ship, and of course, conquer the greatest massacre in human his- relatively few students are involved expanded foreign trade. On the trend. However, the present bar- formidable Chiang Kai-shek. In tory...is that of 26,300,000 Chinese other hand, the Maoists (Far Left) MI politics to the same extent as in during the regime of Mao Tse-tung rier to improving Sino-American doing so, Mao liberated a beleag- oppose industrialization stressing relations is still the Taiwan issue ered China eradicating the last of between 1949 and May, 1965." The party ideology and socialism "to McCarthy, who is calling for the national indoctrination included which Lestz said he feels is slowly foreign domination. remain free of bourgeous influence unwinding itself. ; redistribution of employment, siz- Throughout Mao's life, defi- massive brainwashing and Mao able cuts in the defense budget, by perpetual revolution" as a ance of authority, hatred of intel- became amazingly ruthless in his ,ueans of gradual maodernization. and the acceleration of mass lectuals, and a passion for, revolu- over-zealousness for revolution. Thus it will be interesting to transit, is finding his quest no easy tion characterized his actions. He Mao practiced "bloody politics". In Vohr's opinion, Mao's naive watch the development of a west- task. Because most states, enforce unified China while transforming More recent victims of Mao's "revolutionary romanticism" does ern ideology continue to grow in an election laws that McCarthy feels aggression included Lin Piao and not often work when applied Eastern culture without Mao Tse- are structured in favor of the 2000 years of reactionary Confucian tradition into a revolutionary, vi- ex-Deputy Premier Teng Hsiao- practically and a country of 850 tung to guide and control China's two-party system, independent ping. million people necessitates a more modernization. Future Chinese candidates have to undertake rig- able political ideology. Maoism" completely altered Mao's death, following those of pragmatic administration. leadership can only attempt to orous petition campaigns to secure Chou En-lai and Congressional Regardless of the crisis, Mi- supersede Mao, although Mao will Places on the ballot. the lives of one quarter of the Chairman Chu-teh, marks the end chaiel Lestz, lecturer in history, never be replaced. It is difficult to f So far, McCarthy has qualified world's population affecting their said he feels that the death of Mao predict China's future, we will Lt?r ballot position in 23 states. He of the great revolutionary genera- £ a language, customs, and lifestyles. tion. It appears that the ensuing will hot herald a return to the know only after the fact. ^xpects to be listed in at least 40 In doing so, Mao has created his Confucian way of life - rather /•»tes by election day. vacuum will be initially filled by a own cult through songs, pictures, collective leadership. Communism has taken a. firm foot '• McCarthy and his slim staff poetry, and the "little red book". As China temporarily enters a in China, though elements of "If we are to count the ment of •realize that it will be no easy task to This cult, manifested primarily tradition remain. destiny iProve that he is a serious candi- period of international isolation, in China's Youth and the Red the main emphasis will be on a date. For starters, they need more Guard, has provided the tool with The Middle Kingdom also faces support. smooth transition of power in order problems in international politics." We have to depend upon which Mao was able to remain in to insure continuity and stability. today." power despite unsuccessful pro- With the death of Mao Tse-tung, Yeager excitedly talks about the However, Dr. Ranbir Vohra, chair- Sino-Russian relations should im- Mao Tse-tung. Nineteen Poems Mcentrated student activity for grams such as the Hundred page 6. The Trinity Tripod, September 28,1976 On Patrol: Patrolling the Beat With Security patrol his North Campus beat. It monitor police and fire calls and tour. On this part of the patrol, the Dick says that the only thing that by Kenneth Crowe security officer has to punch his he can do is ignore it. The responsibility of protecting started out as a typically quiet nightsticks for self-defense. At this night, as we swung on to Summit time • Security is monitoring the time clock with keys located at After inspecting High Rise we Frinity College lies primarily with various spots in the buildings ;he security guards who patrol the St. which we took to Vernon and police and fire calls with the men's went to Allen East and West where then to Broad St. personal radios. It is considered through which he makes his we went down into the poorly lit :ampus by car and foot. To the rounds. This is probably the worst students they seem to be nonexist- On Broad St., we saw what important to do this because it lets basements to punch the time clock. appeared to be a fight but when Security know if the police or fire part of the night for a guard as he As we came out of Allen West, ent, yet they are the ones who keep must go through cellars and up and order and protect the lives and investigated turned out to be some departments are responding to Loomis received a call to help a kids fooling around. We then calls for assistance from Trinity, as down cases to punch his clock in female who was being attacked in property of students. One of these the proper order. nen is Dick Loomis whom I proceeded up Allen Place where we Security is not always informed if front of the building. With the back accompanied on a two hour patrol checked the school parking lots. the police have been called. If they Besides punching the clock, the up unit on the way, we' started around the building to the front Friday night. Next, we went to Crescent St. know that the Hartford police or security officer also must make fire departments have been called, sure that all of the fire doors are when a student poked his head out Loomis is a local resident who where we again checked out the of a window to tell us that it was a grew up down the street from parking lots and school owned they will then be able to assist closed and that no one has entered them. the building. The importance of prank. It seems that a friend of his Trinity and has worked for Security buildings. During this time Loomis had called Mather and reported for the last eleven years. He said he told me how it was to be a security The Security officers would like these patrols is illustrated by an nightsticks for defense. Presently incident which occurred at the this nonexistent attack. This upset enjoys his work because "It's a officer at Trinity. Dick and he told the student that good experience and I enjoy One of the biggest problems when Security is called to break up beginning of the semester in the a fight, the men have to rely on Chapel. It seems that a student had they should not be fooling around working with and helping people. which faces security, according to like that. The embarrassed student Our evening began at Mather Loomis, is that they are not using their fists if they are failed to close a door to the Chapel attacked. They do not want to be properly and four people from off replied, "I'm sorry," and disap- where Loomis picked me up in the adequately equipped. This consists peared back into his room. unmarked car which is used to mainly of the lack of radios to issued guns because they feel that campus had discovered this and it would be courting tragedy. When were in the process of burgalizing confronted with guns, Security the Chapel when Loomis discov- Loomis remarked that it was calls the Hartford police to handle ered them. He was able to stop calls such as these and false fire the situation and they back them them and with assistance capture alarms which irked the Security Budget Committee up. them. officers most. But he said it was Another problem which is pla- The most frustrating part of the only a small minority of the student guing Security now is the matter of clock tour for Loomis is his patrol body which did this and that most communications. This is happening through the North Campus dorms. of the students were cooperative. Meets There the students prop open the Continued from Page 3 because of the deterioration of the gestion, the offices could be used main radio located in Mather. fire doors and fail to lock their We then moved on to our last erally held for emergency use. by various student organizations. However, this radio is supposed to doors. In 90-92 Vernon St. we had stop, Ogilby Hall. After that we The committee discussed the Despite the proposals, no decisions be replaced. to go to all three floors to lock the walked back to the Security Office possibility of using the extra money were made. Keeping in contact is one of the unlocked back doors. He pointed where we parted. to buy a van shared by all budgeted After the meeting, one member things which has to be done while out that with all of the students out organizations. In the long run, the of the committee expressed to this on patrol so that if a problem on the front stoop listening to My experience showed me that /an would be expected to save reporter considerable unhappiness arises, a back-up unit can be called music it would have been very easy security officers are hard working noney. Also suggested was the with the committee. He questioned upon to assist if necessary. Contact for someone to enter the building individuals who are concerned Inanctng of an all-day symposium the fairness of the fact that "six is also maintained so that if help is and rob the rooms. They would about their work. Sometimes the in nuclear power. people dictate what is going on needed from the Hartford police have had an easy time entering the work is exciting, but most of the The Committee chairman, Jeff campus." Pointing out that the they can be reached 'quickly. But, rooms because several of them time it is a hard routine which each Seltzer proposed the idea of Budget Committee receives com- according to Loomis, sometimes were left unattended and unlocked. guard carries out to the best of his laking a suite of offices out of a plaints from various people, he Mather cannot be reached because While we went through the ability. irge empty room in Mather's said, "In some ways the Budget the student working on the front North Campus dorm, Loomis asement. According to the sug- Committee deserves the flack." desk has turned the two-way radio showed me another problem which down so that he can talk to a friend faces the security officers: the lack or so he can listen to music. An of fire extinguishers in the places example of the problems which where they are supposed to be. Note: A. Garofolo would like it Security has in communications This results from vandalism. For announced that the Security office occurred Friday night when Loomis Dick it is particularly annoying has collected more lost items in 3 called in to ask for police assistance because he almost lost his life in a weeks than they usuallydo in a in checking out two suspicious fire when the fire extinguisher was semester. If you have lost any- characters. The trouble was that not in its proper place. thing,, please come down to the Mather was having a hard time We also encountered some of Security office to see if it has been picking up our signal. It also the mild verbal abuse which turned in. seemed they didn't believe that we security receives on its rounds. wanted them to call the police. We spent the .rest of the night giving escorts to people and making the rounds of the clock Hillel Seeks Unity

by Frank Fallen, Jr. Community. Members of the Jewish com- RELIGIOUS: With a large munity met during the evening of group from diverse backgrounds it September 9 in Hamlin Hall to is impossible to establish any one discuss means of increasing partic- type of worship. A meeting will ipation in Hillel, the campus be held at some future date to ABC Jewish organization. decide what types of communal Oh the agenda were sugges- worship would be possible and tions for organizing social, reli- desirable. Opportunity to attend gious, cultural, and educational services in town with a member of activities with the goal of drawing the board may be arranged. Jewish students at Trinity closer CULTURAL: Hillel would like to PIZZA HOUSE together. • set up language tables in the Cave An eight-student advisory com- for those who speak Hebrew or (ACROSS FROM TRINITY CAMPUS) mittee has been formed to provide Yiddish. Israeli folk dancing may a stronger, more central leadership be organized on campus. for Hillel. There is hope .that they EDUCATIONAL: Lecture series , 287 NEW BRITAIN AVENUE - HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT will be able to reverse the trend of are tentatively planned. stagnation that has thinned the Richard Sfaron, Prop. ranks of active participants in Hillel in recent years. Library Ross Lewin, a member of this committee, said he feels that Hillel Enlarges • DELICIOUS PIZZA is going about the difficult task of trying to coalesce the Jewish The Cambridge Seven Assoc- community here at Trinity. He said iates, Inc., of Cambridge, Massa- he believes that an important aim chusetts, has been awarded the • HOT OVEN GRINDERS of Hillel is that it strive to organize contract for the addition to the communal activities that would be Library. The preliminary work meaningful to all participants, began in August and the schedule while at the same time encouraging indicates that all of the drawings • ROAST BEEF GRINDERS Jewish students to be more invol- may be completed by June of 1977. ved with each other and with The charge includes the 44,000 sq. Judaism. • ft. addition to the library, the Possible activities that Hillel renovation of the main floor of the Phone 247-0234 would like a show of interest in are library and the third floor which as follows: presently houses the Watkinson CALL WHEN YOU LEAVE AND YOUR SOCIAL: The focus of a social Library. The firm is also commis- activity would be to organize study sioned to completely overhaul the groups, small music groups, and heating, air conditioning and vent- PIZZA WILL BE READY WHEN YOU ARRIVE groups to attend movies, with" the ilations systems. aim of serving as a way for Jewish The firm has done the Pomfret students to relate to the Trinity School Library and has recently BUY 4 PIZZAS - ANY SIZE - GET THE 5th ONE FREE community as a whole group. completed plans for the addition to There is also hope for establishing and complete renovation of the relations with the Hartford Jewish Smith College Library. September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page 7 Editorial Responsible Participation

The Student Government Association (SGA) will hold elections for a total their collegiate experience here. All members of the College must realize that, of 17 vacant postions this Thursday, September 30 and Friday, October 1. their collective involvement in the scheduling of campus events, the hiring Out of a campus population of roughly 1700, however, no students have and appointment of faculty, and general decision-making is not a privilege, submitted nominating partitions for either the Career Counseling Advisory but a responsibilty. Committee or the Connecticut Public Interest Research Group (ConnPIRG). The vacant positions open on the SGA this week offer a student voice in all Only one candidate will appear on the ballot for the College Affairs student.faculty and administrative levels of this college community. Whether Committee and a mere two for the all-important Budget Committee. it be casting a vote or running as a write-in candidate, become involved! We We need not remind ourselves of the simple fact that student government all have the right and responsibility to participate in the upcoming all-campus is what students make it. Since the functional reality of SGA and similar elections. organizations rests entirely on the interest and support of the community, it's rather disheartening that once again, a mere handful of students have chosen to seek office in this week's all-college election. Campus apathy has plagued effective student government here at Trinity for over a decade. During the late 1960's, many undergraduate In Case You've Forgotten... administrative organizations were managed by a few and mocked by the 'Open Period' was originally viewed as an important element in a curriculum which majority. In 1970, the senate, which was the student governing body at the stressed, independent study. Adopted as one of 28 proposals in the 1969 Curriculum time, was forced into dissolution because of the embarrassingly small revisions, Open Period was to provide students and faculty a chance to get together without numbers of students participating in elections. the structure, formality or pressure of daily classes. In recent years, students have pushed for a louder voice in the It was planned not only as a chance to begin research on major papers, and catch up on administration and policy-making of the college community. However, until reading, but also as an opportunity for colloquia, for departments and majors to discuss the students realize that they are citizens of the community first, and students problems and progress related to their fields, but most important, to enable students and second, they will remain powerless to determine the quality and content of faculty to have informal meetings. Letters

canaries. Can't we do something other letter exceeds his authority intellectual realm and the "here Congratulations about this gross lack of considera- (and responsibility) when he al-. and now" can and does lead to the Cram tion? I'm sure the operators of leges our active participation in the impromptu outbursts of vandalism, To the Editor: these trucks would not appreciate it malicious destruction of his auto- prankster routines, and the occa- I have just Finished reading the if I commissioned the Trinity mobile, not actually observed by sional bouts of 'serious drinking' Consciousness first issue of the Trinity Tripod for Carillonneurs to return the favor to him in his "quasi-conscious, sleepy on the weekends. To the Editor: this academic year. I think it is them one Sunday morning. stupor". These are all gestures against a The drive was an awfully long superior to any issue of the Tripod I Thank You, In fact, ours and most other seemingly absurd reality creating one for my parents, but fortunately l> have seen in a long, long time. Dan Meyer '80 campus parties do often run into temporary flights into meaning by the ride went quickly in our Instead of the variety of esoteric the wee hours of the morning, and their sheer senselessness. Students Country Squire stationvvagon. It stories which seemed to fill the regardless of the circumstances, take themselves very seriously was hard fitting my color T.V., '"• pages of certain past issues of the Community there always exists an infringe- these davs so outwardly they must stereo, Gucci shoes, Pucci clothes, Tripod, you appear to have con- ment on the privacy of someone. appear not to. The pre-med bellies riding gear, skis, and baubles in centrated on news and that, I Anyone associated with fraterni- his hardnosed outlook of reality by the back, but my brother was able believe, is what the Tripod should Involvement ties, as last week's young author is, hanging out at all the right parties to take the larger items in his Lear concentrate on. must be aware of the magnitude to and if one of the exit signs gets jet. Gosh, but 1 am angry that my Again, my congratulations on a To the Editor: which this type of merry-making broken when he's throwing a Caribbean suntan has already fine first issue. I am concerned about the lack of may extend, particularly on a frisbee in the dorm hallway, he started to fade. Sincerely, awareness within the Trinity com- Saturday night. says boldly "what the f—, we pay It's good to know that, even John R. Reitemeyer munity as the what goes on beyond Certainly the lower end of Ver- enough to go to this place." It is here, I can count on Mr. Hornung the boundaries of our campus. I am non Street holds no monopoly on this appearance of carefree plea- to cram social consciousness down Ed. Note: Mr. Reitmeyer is Chair- not referring to any complex the partying that occurs or on the sure which is so important, and my throat. man of the Board of Directors at issues, but rather simply to the city refuse that abounds up and down ultimately so tragic. Lise Levin '78 The Hartford Courant. which, despite the fact it is at our both sides of the street, and to try Chip Coolidge 79 Paris, France back door, is yet undiscovered by and .place responsibility for either many students. Hartford is an or both of these on any organization Quiet Please! amazingly exciting and diverse city is ludicrous. That the annoyed which offers everything from Veg- neighbor mis-interprets our broth- To the Editor: etarian restaurants to fun crafts erhood as one which festers im- shows on the lawn of the capital Tripod No person at Trinity needs to be penetrable irresponsibility does not reminded of the large costs involv- building. My message is quite justify his failure to personally ed in being a student here, in every simple.. There is much more to investigate these mere assertions. aspect. Besides the tuition, we are education than a daily routine of classes and long evenings in the Perhaps complaints may be Editor-in-Chief — required to purchase numerous justified, however when the of- 5, books and supplies, few of which library. Get into Hartford and Jeffrey Duf resne expose yourself to some of the fended party takes no measures to are worth what the dollars could rectify the situation other than an have otherwise bought. It was with excitement of a city and all its many Managing Editor Associate Editor opportunities. I can't help but think attempt at public degradation, no Henry Merens this in mind that I debated whether cooperation can possible result. We Marc Blumenthal or not to spend $6.43 extra on my that those students who complain about Hartford are unaware of the remain... Netfs Editor - new clock so that it would be '.- Merrily, Arts Editor experiences it has to offer. I write Diane Schwartz equipped with an alarm. It is not The Brotherhood of Psi Upsilon Ira Goldman good to sleep through a morning this letter to the editor in hopes class. You know, I decided to spend that the Tripod will continue to help Sports Editors Photo Editor keep us informed of as many events 'Rampant that extra S6.43 on the "View 5 - John Gillespie Steve Roberts Alarm" feature of my General that are happening in the Hartford Howard Lombard. Electric Clock. My alarm was made area as possible. That way there is Vandalism no excuse to sit back and wonder obsolete the very first morning To the Editor: Contributing Editors Copy Editors before it even had the opportunity what Hartford is all about. One At the risk of sounding like a 1 need r.jt go to Boston or NYC to Diane Molleson Jeanine Figur to wake me up. pompous ass, I'd like to comment Howard Sherman • find excitement. on the "rampant vandalism", and Nancy Riemer This brings me to my major Steve Titus'; Seth Price point. For some reason, every Aly^on Henning 77 other problems which seem to have arrived with this year's student morning between 7:00 and 9:00 Announcement Manage* Business Manager a.m., almost every student living in body. It seems worthwhile to South Campus is unwillingly and We're remember that the undergraduate J. Carey La Porte Chris Hanna unmercifully exposed to the loudest is in somewhat of a diclotomous and most obnoxious alarm clock I position; on the one hand he is Circulation Manager Advertising manager Not Sorry \ exorted to uphold all the noble have ever heard. Every time a Brian Thomas Megan Maguire campus truck decides to go into To The Editor: virtues of intellectual curiousity In this same section last week, and self examination postulated by reverse, it also decides it must The TRIPOD (5 published by the students of Trintty CpHege, and is H,. bring attention to itself by contin- there appeared an "enlightening" the school catalog and other ideal- istic sources, and on the other hand written and edited entirely by the student staff. All materials are edited ^ uously striking a staccato F sharp. letter from an "annoyed" member and printed at the discretion of the editorial board; free lance material is Now it may be that these bells are of the Trinity community. In this he is thrust into a' social environ- warmly encouraged. Deadline for articles, letters to the editor and other necessary as a safety precaution in thinly disguised attack, several ment where sensual gratification editorial page copy is 5 p.m., Saturday preceding Tuesday's TRIPOD; an elementary or even junior high degrading arid slanderous charges and the pursuit of the "laid back" deadline for advertisements is 12 p.m. Saturday. The TRIPOD offices are school, but I can't see the need to were leveled at our "boys". It is identity;is the status quo. located in Seabury 34. Office hours: Saturday, 3-5 p.m., Sunday from 3 wake us every morning just 'to not our intent to deny all of these It seems that the resultant p.m. Telephone 246-1829 or 527-3151, ext. 252. Mailing address. Box 1310, make sure we won't accidently run allegations by claiming to be confusion between the "ideal" and Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 06104. behind one of these overgrown angels,.however, the author of the the "real", the split between the page 8, The Trinity Tripod, September^, 1976 Commentary

Horizons: Kirkpatrick Speaks On 'Process Theology' by Marc Blumenthal Dr. Frank G. Kirkpatrick, asso- the casually interested. Kirkpatrick space and still remain limitless. ciate professor of religion, deli- also felt somewhat at a disadvan- Process theology views all vered the first lecture in the tage due to the overwhelming size things, including God, as entities in Horizons program last Tuesday of the crowd. . a process of change and becoming. evening. Kirkpatrick spoke on Kirkpatrick first emphasized "All reality is in process," says "Beyond the 'God Beyond God' — the importance of the . religious Kirkpatrick, "Process theology po- New Views on Divine Transcen- dimension in the completeness of sits the interpenetration of all Professor Kirkpatrick delivers the first Horizons lecture in Goodwin Theatre. dence' ' to a crowd of approximately any society. The nature of divine things." Within process thology, 400 people in the Goodwin Theatre transcendence within this dimen- God becomes the only entity that of the Austin Arts Center. The sion then becomes paramount. In a can incorporate alL This is the full According to Kirkpatrick, pro- lecture had been scheduled in quick survey of the development of meaning of the personal relation- cess theology is experience-cen- Tonight's Horizon lecture will be McCook Auditorium, but had to be thought in regard to divine trans- ship with God as an "involved, tered: "We and God must partici- interdependent participant." God pate in overcoming evil in space moved due to the overflow crowd. cendence, Kirkpatrick filled in the and time without paradox and given by Dr. Michael Sacks, The Horizons program's pur- background of today's process cannot exist alone. God can be certainty." pose is to expose students and theologians. He discussed such affected by other entities, but God In the respect that Kirkpatrick's assistant professor of sociology, on thinkers as Rudolf Otto, Paul is the only entity that can affect all others to new developments in a lecture left one with several "Sexual Equality in Soviet Russia" variety of fields. In this vein, Tillich and Alfred North White- others. This type of reasoning important questions, his purpose of challenges the traditional theologi- exciting interest in his field was Professor Kirkpatrick chose to head. at 8:00 p.m. in the Washington discuss process theology. Kirk- Most "traditional" theologians, cal assumption of God's immuta- well done. It might, perhaps, be a patrick expounded upon his chosen bility. good idea to schedule an informal including even Paul Tillich, ac- discussion with each Horizons Room. topic clearly and admirable. It was cepted the notion of a transcendent speaker sometime during the week an unfortunate choice for the first God outside of time and space, Mellon Notes: following his/her presentation. Horizons lecture, however. Process unable to be conceived of by man. theology is a tremendously com- Process theologians maintain that plex subject difficult to explain to God may be viewed within time and Gillis Defines History

Attn: Trin Drinkers by Jon Zonderman ember 18. He will be on campus "History of Science" on December In the first Mellon Symposium November 18 and 19. 2. by Rick Hornung hol in our bloodstreams. Getting Lecture by a visiting scholar, To round out the schedule, Dr. Both the Harvey and Hanson The Rathskeller is a cover-up. drunk at Trinity secures a place in Professor John Randall Gillis of Earl Hanson of Wesleyan Univer- lectures will be at 8:00 p.m. in Spending thousands of dollars to the normal- affairs of the college. Livingston College of Rutgers Uni- sity will deliver a lecture on the Wean Lounge. further the patterns of Trinity Those who do not imbibe are auto- versity presented a lecture entitled drinking and social life is a matically excluded. By creating a "Europe's Age of Revolution in travesty. First, Trinity has enough Rathskeller, the Administration World Perspective." on campus spots for drinking—the and the students have acknow- The lecture was presented at Profs Critique Hyland quad, dorm rooms, the long walk, ledged their need for alcohol. 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, September classrooms, teacher's offices. AH Instead of dealing with the possible 23 in Wean Lounge. Attendance by Jon Zonderman does Milla Riggio of the English these spots have been utilized and causes of this need, they make it was low, most likely due to the The Mellon Symposium met department when she talks about proven to be successful. If a group easier to service. early starting time (The lecture last Wednesday in formal public the "energy" expended by man- of people really want to congregate session for the first time this kind in the search for freedom. I love beer. This love and my started early so that all who and drink in a relaxed atmosphere, attended could get home in time for semester. The meeting was a Professor Alan Fink of Psycho- then the above mentioned places desire to continue it has earned me colloquium to discuss, and react to, logy sees his position as being a spot in the workings of Trinity the presidential debates.). have sufficed. Second, student Professor Sam Kassow of the the paper presented by Dr. Drew unique in that he is a member of a quarters are overcrowded; faculty social life. Though most would Hyland in a public lecture Wed- discipline that was "born in the never be seen with me at a bar, I history department, one of the five size frozen; class size continues to Mellon symposiasts, and a former nesday, September 15. nineteenth century." He would like increase; scholarship money is feel quite comfortable going out for this colloquium, which was to know what conditions within drinks with other Trinity people. It student of Professor Gillis', intro- dwindling; and, tuition is rising. In duced the lecture. held at 70 Vernon Street, afforded society in the nineteenth century light of all these problems, stu- •is one of the few ways we the college community the first real led to the formal birth of psycho- encourage each other at Trinity. Professor Gillis' main thesis is dents and administrators deem it that the distinction which many chance to sit down with the sympo- logy. Could it have been the search necessary to create a whole new Even in frequenting Phil's, we siasts and enter into conversation for freedom? establish a certain distance from students of the history of the -space for drinking. It sounds United States and Europe draw with them. Frank Kirkpatrick of the Reli- absurd. More drinking space, while the college. We break through the gates and see. each other in a dif- between the "democratic" revolu- ; In theory, all of the meetings of gion department would like to know . the college begins to crumble. I can tions which occurred in the West in the symposiasts, which are held what it was about the nineteenth not believe that people who know ferent setting. However, the Rath- skeller is Trinity's gift to our the late eighteenth and early from 1:30 to 5:00 on Tuesdays and century that caused the "great how to get what they want—i.e. the nineteenth centuries, and the Thursdays at 70 Vernon, are open divorce" of theology and philo- Administration—would ignore disease. We can sit there and watch other idiots participate in "communist" or third world revol- to the public. However, these sophy that has occurred in the such problems and commit thous- utions of the twentieth century is meetings have not been publicized twentieth century. ands of dollars for more beer in a Trinity's communal addiction. We junkies can get high without an artificial one. at all, and therefore attendance has And Drew Hyland, who posed pleasant space. Perhaps, they His thesis is in direct contrast to been nil. the symposium question in a very aren't ignoring these issues in challenging the way in which we perceive ourselves as related to that of the historians of the Because of the introductory general way in his introductory building a Rathskeller. (And the (1950's), the so called "Cold War nature of the meeting, all of the lecture, spoke for all of the sym- shadow knows what evil lurks in Trinity. In the Rathskeller, we pump alcohol into our blood Historians." After all, "history," symposiasts, who represent five posiasts (it can be assumed) when the hearts of men!) says professor Gillis, "is a product different academic departments, he said that one of the most excit- The Rathskeller serves a good thinking that we are there to gather socially. The deception occurs in of the period in which the historian presented their reasons for becom- ing things about the Symposium purpose—not beer, but a place to finds himself." ing involved in the symposium. By was having the time to study some keep the students drunk and our merely accepting alcohol con- sumption as a form of social In Dr. Gillis' opinion, the listening to each member of the of the great nineteenth century happy. The rathskeller can be seen American Revolution was not a group describe their own specific thinkers from many disciplines. as Trinity's gift to escapism in that gathering. On the surface, this may be so, but really Trinity drinks unique event in world history as field of interest, and their particu- (The symposiasts are granted a two a student no longer has to go off many Americans would like to lar reasons for becoming a part fo course reduction in teaching load campus for alcohol. Without sup- seriously. The expense of a Rath- skeller shows how deep our com- think. It was part of a "series of this semester-long examination of for this semester.). porting the idiocy of fraternities, insurrections" of the late eight- "The Individuals the Nineteenth For the rest of the semester, the the Administration has figured out mitment ,to preserving alcoholism runs. eenth and early nineteenth centur- Century", one was afforded a Trinity faculty portion of the a way to check a potentially ies. Looked upon in the broadest greater understanding of where Symposium will not follow the dangerous habit amongst students. We blanket ourselves again. perspective, it has a relation to each person was coming from in format of the Hyland lecture. All of In getting drunk, we do not need to The Trinity cover up extends far every political revolution since relation to the entire conversation. the other formal presentations by touch the world around us or the into the nightmare of waking up in then. The five symposiasts are all the Trinity faculty will be made in world of overcrowded dorms, bad Downes memorial and being sober. The Mellon Symposium will colloquium, with a short opening classes, disgruntled professors, approaching the study from a dif- Lockwood and Nye offer us Orange present four more distinguished ferent angle, and this fact keeps statement, and then a general etc. A new space allows us to Juice, while they cool it with scholars to the campus this semes- discussion of the topic. separate our drinking. While drink- the discussion fast paced. An in- Gordon's and Tonic. The Vice ter. Dr. Stanley Rosen of the dividual very rarely has a chance to There will be four colloquia: ing to forget, we can even forget President sips a fine wine, asking Philosophy department at Pennsyl- that there is a hostile Trinity, let get bogged down in his or her own two in October and two in us if we want beer. Instead of vania State University will be on particular concern before another November. All will be held in Wean alone a hostile Hartford. (Oh I saying we can get our own, we run campus to lead a group of seminars forgot, hostility is not accepted any symposiast attempts to redefine Lounge at 8:00 p.m. The dates of to his feet and say yes yes yes yes. on October 7 arid 8. He will lecture the conversation within the frame- the colloquia and presentation more; aggression is organic, host- The license is applied for. The Ad- at 8:00 p.m. on the evening of ility a synthetic fiber.) work of his/her discipline. speakers are as follows: Thursday. ministration pours another round October 7 in McCook Auditorium. "More than any other, the October 14, Sam Kassow, History: Drinking is Trinity's backbone. for themselves, celebrating another Dr. Bernard Kaplan of Clark nineteenth century was marked by Monday, October 23, Milla Riggio. This is a school of alcoholics victory. We start making plans. A University in Worcester, Massa- a plausible sense of hope." This English; Monday, November 22. masquerading as educators and hard rain will fall in bottles and chusetts will be on campus Nov- statement by Sam Kassow of the Frank Kirkpatrick, Religion; Mon- students. We have all accepted this kegs. Yummy. Wait until the first ember 8 and 9 to lead a series of history department drew the typi- day, November 29, Alan Fink. in our daily relations. How many person who drinks too much gets seminars. Dr. Kaplan's field of cal reaction of heads shaking either Psychology. times do we meet over drinks, work sick and leaves it for the janitors to study is psychology. up and down or from side to side. while drinking, fight under the The Tuesday and Thursday clean. Yummy. Trinity drinkers are Dr. Van Harvey of the Theology Kassow defines his feelings about meetings will continue to be open influence, cry drunken tears, and fine and dandy, guzzling merrily department at the University of the nineteenth century in terms of perform other functions with alco- throughout the semester to all who behind their own bars. Yummy. Pennsylvania will lecture on Nov- man's search for "freedom," as wish to drop in at 70 Vernon St. September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page 9 More Commentary Hot Off the Wires... The material for the following Roses for a Blue Lady" leader is not cremated according to KILLER BEES, AND SPANISH sought a "Final Solution" to the articles appeared in The New York III. Group III: Foreign Mechanisms religious command. FLY international monetary conspiracy Times of Sept. 20, 1976 and serve of Convenience; Do Song Wow, Deputy Assis- After seven years of volatile of Jewish Bolshevism in Argen- as a base for the humorous articles A. Blenders tant to the Deputy of the Assistant political infighting, often of a tina." below. B. Toaster ovens of the People's Public Affairs violent nature, every political fun- In response to this, U.N. ATTENTION!!! C. Water-piks Bureau reportedly remarked to a ctionary and businessman between Director of Human Rights, Earl ** A new directive of national D. Fondue Sets Westerner, "What's the fuss? It's the ages of 24-65 has been shot or Butz stated, "While it is the right importance for the Korean people E. Hibachis a moot queation. Most of the body abducted in this capital city of one of every nation to demand freedom from our beloved Chung Hee Park: F. Power Mowers decomposed fifteen years ago." million. In the face of this from external manipulation of It has come to my attention G. Toilet Paper Dateline: Seoul, Korea, Sept. 20, Argentina has begun to ponder its internal affairs, Labor's statement after having 613,585 people de- Group IV.: Foreign Clothing 1976. future now that a political stale- concerning Argentina's Jews is tained for the wearing of obscene A. Ties PRESIDENT PARK REPLIES TO mate has been reached and the misdirected." T-shirts, cutting off the hair of B. Sport Coats N.Y. TIMES STATEMENT MADE rampant inflation raises the cost of Angered by this, the coalition many of our male citizens, black- C. Leisure suits MON. SEPT. 20 a single egg to $157,015., government is planning to release a -. listing 260 songs deemed decadent D. Clogs I find the statement made by A four hour conference between wave of killer bees in the direction such as, "Never on Sunday,". E. Slacks the N.Y.T. on pg. 11 of its Sept. 20 left and right extremists produced of Texas, from its satellite obser- "Tom Dooley," "I Shot the Group V: Foreign Foods and paper, "These rules came on top no common ground except the vation tower in Juarez, Mexico. Sheriff," "Me and Mrs. Jones," Drinks; of existing political restrictions that mutual interest in resolving "The Seven O. Stevens is Marshall and "We Shall Overcome," we still A. Hot-dogs formally ban criticism of the Jewish Question." McLuhan Professor of Communi- have not as yet achieved that state B. Diet-Rite Cola government as well as criticism of In an interview with A.P. cation at the Conn. School of of social purification so integral to C. Fruit Loops the ban on criticism of the correspondent Jack Lord, formerly Broadcasting and author of the staving off agression from the D. Clams casino government..." to unnecessarily of the T.V. program, "Hawaii forthcoming book, Why T.V. Play- * North and its repressive and E. Steak teriaki and irresponsibly imply an existing Five-O,"Peronist leader Manuel ed Such a Minimal Role in the "k- dictatorial leader Kim II Sung. VI. Group Six; Foreign TV Shows lack of freedom in the Free Lavor remarked that; "both parties Lincoln-Douglas Debates. • Therefore, be it known that A. The Brady Bunch Republicof South Korea. by Andrew Paalborg additional measures have been B. The Flying Nun While the sentence is remark- deemed necessary by the cabinet to C. Star Trek ably unintelligible for a reporter of affect the rapid psychic cleansing D. Bridget & Bernie a major American newspaper, so important to the vitality of a Free E. Mary Tyler Moore Show despite its incoherence, conveys -Trin Talk Korea: that message. Letters, in fact, from F. Medical Center by Amanda Brown and Hugh Mohr TO BE BANNED: Those who ignore this directive other well known heads of state I. Group I; Foreign Phrases of are subject to the penalty of the law have poured in to support my To become completely acclaim- close friends, while a new acquain- Decadence; and to the wrath of their fellow position and I wish to acknowledge ated to any closed society can be a tance can be a stir. A. Hit parade citizens who unite as one to glorify my thanks to the leaders of India, challenge of the first order. Com- Snorkle: verb, adj. the "where B. Don't step on my blue suede the destiny of the Free Republic of Uganda, Argentina, Yugoslavia, munication takes a vocabulary. have you been all my life" shoes South Korea. and Rhodesia. Scientists don't start out conver- approach used after multi-beer B. Everything's groovy DATELINE: SEPT. 19,1996 Such abuse as that recorded in sing about quantum mechanics, or consumption. Beware of lines like D. A-Jax the blue dot cleanser Peking: Chinese Leaders unsure of the Times is nothing less than an philosophers about phenomenology "Wanna see my goldfish, tie E. Why don't we do it in the cremation for Chairman Mao: American affront to the legitimacy without long hours spent focusing collection, etchings, etc" and es- road remains a burning question. of my government. As punishment and fusing the words with the pecially "Let's go to bed and just F. Foxy Momma The Chinese government as yet to your people, we are asking the ideas. Here at Trinity, one can talk." Used in reference to a past II. Group II: Foreign Songs of unsettled after the death of the late Rev. Sun Myung Moon to remain in easily become lost and feel out of act. Ex. Nice snorkle job. - Decadence; Chairman and involved in an active your country recruiting your child- touch because of this kind of Snake: n. one who snorkles, not •:/ A. Tommy Roe's, "Jam Up and power struggle for the helm of ren for his Unification Church. language barrier. Luckily, how- necessarily with the one you came Jelly Tight" state, continues to be unsure about ever, the jargon of this special in with. See social climbing. B. Todd Rundgren, "We Gotta Mao's desires for the disposal of Dateline Buenos Aires: Sept. 20, community can be easily mastered To alleviate the problem of nice •- Get You a Woman" his remains. 1976 and the outsider can be an insider guys finishing last, "nice" has C. Donnie and Marie Osmond, Bhuddists in the Western Prov- SOUTH AMERICAN EXPORTS in no time, All it takes is a little taken on a spectrum of meaning "I'm Leavin it All Up to You" inces of Deh Moines threatened a TOTALED FOR 1976: ARGEN- practice. After all, you're too busy that can be interpreted from faint D. Wayne Newton's, "Red mass immolation if the Chinese TINA HIGH IN ANTI-SEMITISM, to lose sleep puzzling over why approval to abhorrent disapproval. you've been congratulated for a (e.g. I hear you snaked your "nice snorkel job" when you don't brother's fiancee last weekend.Nice Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bantam even swim. routine.) As can be seen from the The first step is to master the example, the tone and inflection of It was a dark and stormy ritualistic communal sharing, Elliot brutally. Sylvia was dejected. She words and their meanings. Some of the speaker is all important in evening. It was getting later. They leaned over and pecked lightly had tried to love him, but he these words can be used immedi- determining one's position. The had been drinking for four hours. behind Rosemary's ear. He needed returned her warmth with perver- ately, while others need special beauty of "nice" is that it can be They were getting tight. her now. She avoided his advances, sion. He beat her every night with attention to be used correctly in used with nearly any part of the Restlessly, their eyes began to pretending to read the Tripod. whips. phrases and combinations and to anatomy of personality'. Ex,: nice wander. There were strange vibra- Freshman, she quietly thought. All at once, in a spirit of avoid that embarrassing faux pas. face, nice mouth, nice eyes, nice tions among the four of them. An Sylvia squirmed nervously, all energy which reverberated off the key: adj., all important; a must; "do", nice buzz, nice fog, nice involuntary shudder ran through the time thinking of the last time walls like a lighning bolt, Rosemary major. shirt, nice leisure suit. their collective backbone. The she and Gaston had made love. It stood up. Her mind was spinning Ex: Bloodies at the football game Lastly, the suffix "-idge." prospect of Ford's reelection was a burning fire in her vivid wildly after reading The Article* are really key. Added to certain nouns, "-idge" weighed heavily upon them. The memory. She couldn't stop think- She could do nothing but breathe. gift: n., The essence of "something transforms these simple words into country music was playing soft, but ing of sleeping with him. Even "Howheavy," she said, shattering for nothing"; good luck you don't significant and trendy activities. there was nothing to turn off. "Dear Abby" hadn't helped...still the silence, "how intensely heav- even deserve; an act of God. Ex. verbidge, Cave-idge, bookidge, As they sat in an intimate circle, the senior religion major haunted y." A single tear ran slowly down Ex: A bombscare resulting in the chalkidge. : imbibing the sweet drink of life, her post-adolescent thoughts. Re- her cheek. cancellation of the Biochem exam Now that you've tried out your they began feeling higher and lentlessly nature kept calling her. Gaston immediately forgot his you didn't study for is a gift. A gift new native language, let's just , higher. Nevertheless, an incredible Sick at heart, she answered. anxieties about Rosemary. Totally can be very key. envision one of the many social surge of depression enveloped the Sure, ther was Gwen, Gaston engrossed in the Tripod, he struck gig: n. Synonyms: boogie, show- functions you'll be attending due to atmosphere like a thick fog. It was thought, but she was at Wellesley. up a conversation about the possi- down, blow o-t, bash, high vol- your heightened social awareness going to be tough. They shared in Besides, she hadn't written in a bility of writing an imaginative and tage routine, etc. and acceptability. spurts of nervous laughter. Sus- week. Somewhere a dog barked. highly relevant story, good enough tilt: n, see gig. Setting: top of the Rise, Cook pense gathered in the room like a He felt Ro's hand on his knee. to be printed in the next issue. Taste: the opposite of gift. Finding Arch, the frat house. You'll be stormcloud. "God", he sighed. "Hey, Sylvia, how about if I wrote out tonight's big tilt in High Rise sucking beevoes (brewsky or other In the midst of this intense Elliot had turned away from her about the time you flew from the was last night. alcohol), copping an intense buzz chapel rooftop?" With these five words, the (bulky tankidge), and getting the "That would be a disgrace, in foundation is set for assimilation in gig into overdrive. You'll be this Bicentennial year," retorted nearly any Trin social setting-— greeted with" "Hey, you big stir, Elliot stoically. "Why, any fool freshman room, Washington room, Nice fog. Your routine at last could write an article with one eye locker room, libes (the 'braire), night's tilt was beyond awesome. closed", and he proceeded to AD,- etc. Here are some simple Nice varsity buzz on. Going for the demonstrate: sentences: "Such a gift." "What a ozone, eh? Don't short out early An allegrocial blasphemy con- taste." "That was really key." again." You, of course, will be able cerning dissected epitaphs;. fur- Once these have become second to reply with "Your crazy stain, thermore, galactically heinous in- nature, you are ready for the Big nice oily snorkly on that Smithie. dignations juxtaposed clandestine- Four. While slightly more difficult Heard you were tasted royally. ly (leaving morals naked of purity), due to their subtle differences in Looks like intense drinkidge and quietly raising several topics, un- meaning, these can be practiced boogie tonight. Nice outfit—you wavingly veering westward. Xeno- with your roommates and close steal those pants or fall through an phobic young zygotes!" friends before you head for the big awning? Some O.D. mess you'll The steaming pressure of the time. be." deadline rose from the room like a stir: n. person who is a hard core From here on you're on your frisbee in an updraft. They had partier. Requires at least five own, but you shouldn't have any done it. They could at last return to beers. Ex.: You big stir. You crazy problems. At least you won't have the bottle. But still the thought stir. to worm out when you can be a hit haunted Gaston: How could he get Stain: n. Beyond stir. Wild man at any gathering. No more fumb- Elliot out of the room for the night? or laid back as to be past recovery. ling for topics of conversation no And was he really too old for A stain is never a short hitter, while more deadly silences. No more platonic relationships? you might run into a short stir. A excuses so go party down with an Yours forever, A. Price stain can chug. Stains are usually air of confidence. Be there, aloha. L. Kaufmann S. Allin JLJKasseL page 10, The Trinity Tripod, September 2ff, 1976 More Commentary The Lessons of Martin, Robert and John death of the first Kennedy and breaking up the non-violent and important, because while it is the the largest single bloc in the by David Helm nation's politics". When students The Sixties. A violent decade were too young to be touched by legal demonstrations of King and old men who start the wars and the deaths of the second and of his followers, when this violence by eventually end them, it is the realize the power that they have that began with the inauguration of and begin to use it, then they will John F. Kennedy and ended with Martin Luther King. And so they the "guardians of the Law" was young who have to do the dying. must be told about that time, so shown to them in their own homes, be able to say that they are truly the Nixon Presidency already on citizens. But it is necessary to the road that was to lead to that these men can live on in a new then they were forced to notice it Here then is the third and generation and their heritage will and were forced to question them- perhaps most important lesson of restate that this power is only" Watergate. From the "Best and potential; it will not become real the Brightest" to the "Plumbers". not be forgotten. selves and their society. They had the sixties. If you don't like the way So what have these men got to to ask whether they wished to live your country is being run, then you until all students become involved. It was a decade that was the deaths Students must pull themselves out of three great men, deaths that teach us? in a society that allowed a minority must do something about it. You The first and most obvious to be suppressed in such a fashion. must be involved. The Vietnam of their usual "I'm alright Jack" were to serve no purpose except to rut and begin to try to shape the give the succeeding generations legacy of these years, and the first And more than this, they had to ask peace marchers were the Young, lesson, is that violence rarely themselves the question: If I allow the ones who would be on the front nation's future. Democracy is not a lessons in how to live. It sawe the static process, to live it must be deaths of five students for no achieves its end. Kennedy's death them to do this to the blacks, then line, and-this was the only way that did not stop the legislation that he why not next the Jews, or the they could make themselves heard supported, you cannot just "leave reason, except the stupidity of a it to the experts", that is how the state governor. It saw the rise and planned; Johnson spent the first Poles, or me? Once this realization, and understood. How many in four years of his presidency that it could happen to you had Congress are young enough, in Vietnam war began. Government fall of the Black Panthers. It saw has to be watched at all times and Watts go up in Flames. But it also carrying through the Kennedy come, the movement really began spirit if not in years, to see that plan. Those three years saw the to roll, and the end of suppression youth will no longergo to the front not just when you personally are saw much that was good. Its begin- affected. ning saw man into space for the first real attempt at creating a of minorities in America was line, unless they have a say in first time, and before it ended, it fairer society, a society that would possible. It has not happened yet, where that front line will be? But These then are the lessons of saw man on the moon. And, also, it allow blacks a fair chance in this and bigotry lives on in both sides, the government can only be made Martin, Robert, and John; that saw the three who died. They did white world. These were small but the end is in sight as long as to understand if YOU, everyone of violence rarely works, that non-vio-^ not I hope, live and die for nothing. steps it is true and the fight for civil vigilance is maintained. you, individually and collectively lence often does, and that for eithef The sixties were a complex era rights is not yet over, but at least it work to make them. You must be to stand a chance everyone, but and this makes the lessons that it has begun. These gains in civil This leads us to the second willing to do those time consuming most especially the young, must be teaches hard to find. Indeed many rights were achieved not by lesson of the sixites: where vio- little things, that every one can do, involved and work for what they would choose not to look, not to try violence but by non-violence. The lence will fail, non-violence will which help make a government believe. It is not enough to have to understand. They would say that violence of the Black Panthers not. The King movement is one responsive to the peoples' wishes. ideals, to have a dream of a better they do not want to remember that served only to worsen the situation, example of this; the resistance to Take the time to write to your world, you must be willing to work day in 1963 or those days in 1968 since it made the whites feel the Vietnam war is another. The Congressman or Senator. If you for them, march for them, and when men died for what they threatened, and, thus, their re- Draft dodging and the massive oppose what he is doing, then tell sometimes, as at Kent State, die believed. Yet, remember we must, sponses hardened. But the King peaceful demonstrations did more him so and give him your reasons. for them. In this matter, all does if their deaths are not to have been movement was different. When to show Congress and the world, If he does not change, then tell him not come to him who waits, it- in vain. This is particularly true for whites were shown, via the all that the American people, in that yours is one vote he will not comes to him who works. those who are at college now; most seeing eye of television, the particular the American youth, was get. Students are now, according to David Helm is a visiting student from of them cannot remember the violence of the southern police in against the war. And this is Theodore H. White, "...potentially the University of East A nglict Arts and Reviews

Record Beview: Come Back with Deep Cuts

by Ira Goldman leader and chief inspiration, Dave reputation in their own right, John Mealing (organ, , elec- In some ways, the Strawbs have Cousins, tric piano, harpsichord, synthesiz- "ghostly tale", extremely melo- without any thanks to Rick Wake- dramatic-all within four minutes. earned themselves fame because of man. Deep Cuts, even upon an er), Robert Kirby (mellotron the musicians who have ieft the Indeed, the Strawbs have been strings, woodwind & choir, electric No need to say anymore. It's band, including such people as: initial listening, leaves no doubt as another good Strawbs -what rather quietly putting out fine to its place in that line. piano, French Horn) and Rupert (Yes), records, of which their latest Holmes (piano, harpsichord, clav- other reason do you need for (Fairport Convention & solo works) album, Depp Cuts, is another inet and clarinet) collectively do a buying it? and most recently, the tandem of • , In many ways, Deep Cuts is a 1002 example. With a long string of rebound for the Strawbs. Last fall's fine job. Indeed, no Strawbs album Richard Hudson and . quality including Bursting is really complete without good Unfortunately, these various de- release, , was some- At The Seams, (1973) Hero & what of a disappointment for keyboard work 'Neath the Elms Garden Club partures have often overshadowed Heroine (1974) and Ghosts, (1975), the group itself, including its Strawbs fans. Done obviously to (wives of faculty and administra- the Strawbs have built a good fulfill some contractual committ- Past Strawbs albums have been tion) are sponsoring a plant and ments (they have since moved to a characterized by a numerous bake sale next to Mather Post new label, Polydor), Nomadness amount of rather short and catchy, Office on October 18 between lacked the spirit, originality and yet instrumentally sophisticated 10-1:30. Come and pick up on some overall quality of previous efforts. songs.'Deep Cuts is no exception. greenery and delicious treatsl ^ It just didn't make it. , "I Only Want My Love to Grow; in You" is the album's single^: >wsw^* combining good vocals and pleas- This time, deci- ant rhythm guitar in an excellent ded to put more time into the new _ The Unilsecl Way ; album, and his handprint is quite -•song. . •. •' .•-.• -.•• ••. • •• • . ; :•;,:.; of Greater Hartford clear. The Strawbs remain firmly in his command', as all of the ten "Turn Me Round" is one of the songs are written or co-written by , better rockers on the album, with him. As usual, his moods, or Lambert getting in some good inspirations determine just where licks, as well as some nice organ the Strawbs are going. work from John Mealing. "Charm- er" is in the same class, with its fast-paced guitar, and Cousins' distinctive vocals have drumming-almost remindful of a always been a Strawbs trademark Hudson-Ford tune. and remain so on this album. As before, Cousins also plays some "Simple Visions" is primarily acoustic guitar. an acoustic piece, though once again Lambert demonstrates his Cousins also happens to be : skill as a tasteful and talented rock accompanied by some fine musi guitarist. "Hard, Hard Winter" is cians-a lineup that has been pretty rather mellow and slow-paced, much stable over the last four while "(Wasting My Time) Think- albums. Dave Lambert is on lead ing of You" sounds almost country. guitar, while Charles Cronk is on bass. Cronk teams up with Cousins to co-write seven songs, while both And of course, there are the Cronk and Lambert contribute on usual Dave Cousins' ballads-a re- acoustic guitar and backing vocals. minder of the Strawbs early, folkier days. Here, "Beside the Rio Support The United Way ol Greater Hartford. We do. Grande" stands out. It's a classic The keyboard spot, until recent- Cousins ballad of the first order, ly held by of early- with its subtle, even taunting vocal Renaissance fame, is now shared inflections along with superb in- THANKS. by a number of studio musicians. strumentation. Rio Grande is a September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page 11 More Arts Last Tango in Paris: A Second View he its by Stephen Forsling amoral Parisienne senualist (Maria ly we are meant to react viscerally, sequence in which he speaks to his however, Last Tango in Paris is a ve Few films have evoked such Schneider) in an empty apartment. on a gut level, without intellectual- dead wife, that he is the emotion- film that ought to be seen, and not ill rapturous critical applause as Ber- Their purely sexual relationship is, izing, as we see an individual ally defeated husband. Brando's just by masochists and dilettantes. Hy nardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in for him at least, an attempt to strip trying to totally rid himself of the performance is, paradoxically, too For if it does nothing else, at least to Paris. Highly touted'in intellectual life of its lies, artifice and emotion- artificial in human relationships. powerful, and therefore uncon- it provokes thought and discussion ily» .circles, the film has received al entanglements—everything, in But who really cares? All we see is vincing. In spite of its flaws, —and how many films today are ;al innumerable accolades at interna- short, that characterized his rela- the cruel dehumanization. (The pretensions and glum outlook, really capable of that? :d. tional film festivals and appeared tionship with his wife. He tries to sado-masochistic "butter" se- iUt- on countless "ten-best-of-the- revert to basic, primitive sexual quence is the most replsive in the k" year" lists. In an ususual over- instincts as these are the only film.) Last Tango in Paris fails to he statement, Pauline Kael referred to things which have any meaning for make a universal statement pre- ta Marlon Brando and Bernardo Bert- him anymore. Inevitably , of cisely because the viewer is so be olucci as having "altered the face course, his attempt fails, and his removed from the film. Anything ve. of an art form". With the advan- insistence on a relationship with Bertolucci has to say becomes he'' tage of four year's perspective "no names" becomes just as much merely pseudo-profundity. Tune in to mt today, it's a little difficult to see of an obtrusive hang-up as any that Admittedly there are many nd what all the fuss was about. I have existed in his marriage. In terms of things to admire in the film and ire to confess that I cannot number its utterly despondent human Bertolucci is without doubt a very myself among those who re- vision, Last Tango in Paris is one of talented filmmaker. His camera, as sponded so ecstatically to the film the most conceptually ugly films to WRTC-FM, 89.3 of in his earlier film The Conformist, some three or four years ago. appear in the last few years. The is amazingly expressive. Bertolucci iat When I first saw Last Tango in film portrays the alienated, isolated io* is very good at using physical ; I experienced feelings of modern being as somehow a environments to convey emotional boredom and alienation, almost as universal figure and purports to be states of being—when Brando's Radio Trinity !: if I had been desensitized— I came the definitive statement on our mother-in-law visits him after his Lout of the film virtually numbed, desperate, dehumanized society. In wife's suicide, the first shot we see I not. because 1 had witnessed any In so doing it is at best pretentious totally omits them from the frame. I Shattering Revelations on the and at worst offensive. All we see is a blank wall—in this i Human Condition but because the I found it very difficult to single shot we know all there is to j film left me totaly cold. actually like Last Tango as a movie. know about their relationship. Last Tango in Paris, its lofty This may not sound like a terribly Images of aloneness, especially at serving the Greater pretensions notwithstanding, is critical objection but I think it is the end, are also well portrayed. ..still one of the few truly significant central to what's wrong with the But even Bertolucci's camera fails films of the past five years and as film and why it fails as a work of to bring us inside the world of the i such one of the few truly significant art: we are so distanced from the film. There are some fine moments Hartford j films of the past five years and as characters ans so removed from in the film, though, and Jean- such cannot be dismissed out of their predicament that the film fails Pierre Leaud contributes a refresh- hand. We see a bourgeois expatri- to touch us. Art makes demands of ing diversion from the moroseness ate (Marlon Brando), devastated its observer; he must be involved o- the Brando-Schneider relation- Community. after his wife's mysterious suicide, and be able to bring something to ship' as the latter's fiancee-a wandering aimlessly throughout the experience in order for it to filmmaker who lives cinema. Mar- Paris. An isolated shell of a man, work. In Last Tango in Paris it is lon Brando, however, is still the he encounters and almost immed- almost impossible to find anything most narcissistic of actors, and he iately has sexual relations with an to relate to in the film. Undoubted- never makes us believe, even in the

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MJ : 1 *——". , .. • . .•-•. .-..:•.• ,••.-••-• ,r •.•••••• . IS the very best |G] page 12, The Trinity Tripod, September 28, "1976 More Arts Daisies, and La Religieuse Art. Exhibition and Sale by Nina George SALAD," reads the postscript over State losing out. But the Church top of excellent reprocessed shots deigns to show compassion and DAISIES Dir.: Vera Chytilova; of Europe being destroyed by war. transfers Sister St. Suzanne to a Photg.: Jaroslav Kulera; with Ivana Daisies is a complex film, full of different convent^one where At Trinity College Karbanova, Jutka Cerhova. superb cinematic techniques, but, material luxury, secularization and Czechoslovakia, 1966. whose point is difficult to decipher sexual perversion have combined ' A special exhibition and sale of Original Oriental Art will be presented and needed to be clarified. Is the to make a mockery of the Faith. At first glance, Vera Chytilova's film critical of existentialist art, or Sister St. -Suzanne endures further on Monday, October 11,1976 at Art Center from 12 noon to 8 p.m. Marson Daisies seems like a cross between Ltd. of Baltimore, Maryland specializes in exhibiting for sale a collection did it ultimately become such, misery under pressure from a a Tom Stoppard play and a itself? As a film from a communist lesbian Mother Superior, and fin- of Original Oriental Art totaling approximately 500 peices from Japan, Marx-Brothers movie. First there China, Inia, Tibet, Nepal and Thailand. The oldest prints date back to the country, it is undoubtedly full of ally escapes with a priest, who like are the shots of industrial machine political significance, much of Suzanne, felt he had no calling for 18th and 19th Century and include Chinese woodcuts, Indian miniature cogs interspersed with clips of paintings and manuscripts and master works by such artists as Hiroshige, which must have escaped' non- the religious life. The priest turns World War II bombing raids. One Czech audiences. Daisiesis^i visual out to a lascivious beast from whom Kuniyoshi, and Kunisada. The modern pieces consist of a large group of groans at the two characters' original woodcuts, etchings, lithographs, serigraphs and mezzotints picnic, but difficult to fully under- Suzanne runs away. She manages opening "who-are-we-and-why-is- stand artistically and politically. to make a life for herself as a created by such world renowned contemporaries as Saito, Azechi, Mori,! life-so-meaningless" remarks, Katsuda, and Makt. A representative will be present to answer questions; LA RELIGIEUSE Dir.: laundress in a country village, but thinking, "oh no, not another this brief respite from her troubles about the work, artists, and the various graphic techniques employed.; existentialist drama..." The two Jacques Rivette; with Anna Karin- Prints are shown in open portfolios in an informal atmosphere and you are: a; France.1965 is foiled when she is recognized characters sit stiffly like machines and is forced to flee again. Suzanne invited to browse through this facinating and well-described collection. or dolls, mechanically squeaking The price range is wide and there is a treasure to be found for most Anna Karina has given an ends up as a beggar, but is taken in when they move. One thinks this is by a Madam, as a choice addition to •* everyone's budget. going to be another Waiting for excellent performance as a pious Marson Ltd. specializes in arranging exhibitions and sales of Original but strongly independent young her elegant brothel. Having gone ^ Godot. But fortunately, the action through all three Estates and Oriental Art at colleges, universities, and museums throughout the United picks up almost immediately after nun, in Jacques • Rivette's La {States. Religieuse. The film is a testament finding the entire society rotten to the absurdist opening. We discover the core--or else crueily negligent "these two "dolls" are actually two to the brutal lack of freedom for women in pre-revolutionary and indifferent to the fate of a sisters who live in a crazy apart- gently, pious young woman yearn- ment and make their living ripping France, as much as it is a study in social mobility, and an attack on for freedom, Suzanne plunges to off old men who are taken in by her death from a parlor window. their charms. We also discover the power and corruption of the First and Second Estates. A young they have a food fetish, answer to a The story is based on Diderot's variety of names, always wear the woman finds herself forced into a convent because as an illegitimate account of a similar real-life "same" clothes, and like to play situation in which a woman had games in the women's rooms of child of a noble family, she will not be eligible for a dowry. As an been shut up in a convent from the fancy restaurants. Daisies is a age of three. She, too, was forced collage of images and dialogue unmarried woman, Suzanne will have virtually no future in that to take the veil, and subsequently revolving around these themes. sued for a release from her vows. We see the women being wined society. Her only alternative is to and dined by a seemingly endless scandalize the family by taking to La Religieuse is exquisitely spate of conservative old-men, of the streets as a commoner, or to photographed in a soft ektacolor, whom the women then dispose, placate them by retreating to a with excellent sets and costuming seeing them off on, presumably, nunnery, where she will presum- to add to its intense visual appeal. - commuter trains. This gives sur- ably by backed up by the wealth, Jacques Rivette has subtly but;; realist photographer Jaroslav Kul- power and prestige of the Church. forcefully exposed the unscrupu- era an opportunity for some of the Suzanne takes the vows against lousness of both the clergy and the most complex and fascinating her will and soon discovers convent aristocracy of pre-revolutionary« cinematography I have ever seen. life to be hideously masocistic and France, using the touching story ot His train sequences are speeded- unnatural. Medieval horrors of a gently and intelligent young nun up multicolor filtered and repro- hair-shirts and self-discipline crusading against official corrup- cessed shots of trainyards and whips, bread and water diets and tion, as the touchstone of his tracks that have to be seen to be solitary confinement, emerge with- critique. It is a well-crafted film believed. The restaurant scenes in the apparent peaceful solemnity with historical and literary interest; also provide for some tricky of the convent. Suzanne appeals to one that is a good counter to the photography with alternating color the law for a revocation 6f her vows romantic way in which the 18th and monochrome film, time lapse and opens . a famous court-case centruy French ruling classes are sequences, special filtered I shots, pitting Church against State, with usually portrayed. and so forth. When the sisters aren't being treated by old men, they are at a riverside bathing ART IN THE AREA pavilion, reciting existentialist cliches to one another, or, they are by Beth Kurtz in their apartment transforming their surroundings into environ- MUSIC mental-pop-art. They eat photo- CAndlelight Concert graphs of food, set fire to various Saturday, Oct. 16, 8:00PM Tickets: 16.50 hangings made of telephone-wire At Avon Old Farm School, Avon Ct. and toilet paper, crayon on the "The Baroque Trumpet" ARLO GUTHRIE walls, drink, the bathwater, insult The program includes pieces by Handel, each other, romp around in their Richtcr, Bach, Fasch, and Mozart. with Shenandoah underwear, eat sausages with scissors, etc, ad Inflnltujn Here Opera-Oratorio there is a marvelous sequence of Saturday, Oct. 2. 8:15 PM Tickets: $6.00 women cutting up each other's film At Trinity Episcopal Church images like paper dolls-another 120 Sigourney St., Hartford. Saturday Oct. 9,1976 "Alexander's Feast" variation in the cinematic innova- A semi-professional chorus of 40, tions for which Czech filmmakers the West Bank Singers < /. are so famous. will be joined by the orchestra showtime 8 p.m. The real drift of the film at last and guest soloist for the show. becomes evident when the women run riot in a fancy jazz club, junking ART $ $ the place and mocking the bour- Tickets: 6.5O/ 5.5O/M.5O geois clientele in true Marx- Wadsworth Athencum Brothers fashion. One begins tosee Hartford, Connecticut 06103 this is not just another existentialist plug for the absurdity of life. It is a Through October: parody of the kind of cynicism and MATRIX: environmental sculpture nihilism which tends to grow out of by Michael Singer Tickets available at Bushnell Box Office bourgeois art turned decadent, displayed in Tapestry Hall with its perpetual fin-du-monde and at all Ticketron Outlets. malaise. The film culminates in a Twelve lithographs food orgy involving the destruction by Odilon Redon; of a fancy banquet room, as the two 19th Centurv French artist "spoiled" women give vent to their On display in the Prints and Drawings Gallery Bushnell Box Office — 246-6807 seemingly anti-social instincts. But LECTURE SERIES lest the audience be disgusted and Bushnell Merhorial Hall outraged, and miss the true point Adult Lecture Series 166 Capitol Avenue of the film, the director has made Hartford College for Women A v sure to tack on her ultimate slap in 1265 Asylum Avenue Hartford, CT the face directed toward a deca- Hartford, Connecticut 06105 dent, materialistic bourgeoisie: Eleven extraordinary French Women "DEDICATION: TO ALL THOSE will be discussed six consecutive Thursdays at 10:30 WHOSE INDIGNATION IS starting October 7 in Auerbach Science Center, LIMITED TO A SMASHPTl-llP 30 Elizabeth Street, Hartford. septemoer 40, ta/o, me I unity inpuci, page la DINING IN AND AROUND HARTFORD

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I ' •', t '' O.'J . '.! •!.' page 14, TKe Trinity Tripod, September 28,1976 Announcements

Please consult the Job Bank and ty," at 6:30 in Seabury 9-17. It's and England. Some are paid and During October, the membes% ,.s Danforih Fellows other Venture information avail- free. some are volunteer. In Germany, of the Selection Committee (Prof- Inquiries about the Danforth able in Dean Winslow's Office, and one must have a command of the essors Ogden, Tull, Simmons, Graduate Fellowships, to be awar- make an appointment with Mrs. Barbieri Center German language in order to Zannoni; Deans Spencer, Jibrelj.., ded by the Danforth Foundation of Kidder (Secretary, Office of Edu- Applications materials for Trin- participate. Many of the place- and Winslow) will read applications" . St. Louis, Missouri in March 1977, cational Services) if you are inter- ity students who wish to apply for ments in France are in business, and interview some of the appli- are invited, according to the local ested in seeing the representative. the spring term 1977 will be ..chemistry or physics. cants. The Committee will then campus representative, Professor available after 11 October 1976. Students who are interested select four nominees for the Foun- Robert C. Stewart, Department of OX. Term Please see Mrs. Kidder (Secretary, should read the literature available dation's consideration. Mathematics. Several programs (focused, re- Office of Educational Services) and in the Office of Educational Serv- spectively, on national govern- read the material in the red folder Mystic Studies The Fellowships are open to all ices and make an appointment with This new program, Inaugurated , qualified "persons who have serious ment, urban affairs, foreign policy, labelled "The Barbieri Center, Mrs. Kidder (Secretary, Office of international development, econ- Inc." in the Reading Room of the by Williams College and the Mystafe»»j. interest in careers of teaching in Educational Services). Seaport, is open to students in the colleges and universities, and who omic policy and American studies) Office of Educational Services if are sponsored in Washington, D.C. you with to be considered for parti- 12-College Exchange. Applications plan to study for a Ph.D. in any to participate during either semes- field of study common to the by The American University. Trin- cipation next spring. Watson Fellowships ity may nominate students to ter of the 1977-1978 academic year undergraduate liberal arts curri- The Watson Travelling Fellow- must be made to the Office of culum in the United States. participate in these programs, and Foreign Study ship competition at Trinity College admission to date has not been On Tuesday, 19 October 1976, Educational Services no later than Approximately 60-65 Fellow- is open to all students who will 7 January 1977. Please note the ships will be awarded to seniors difficult. Ms. Candace Herene of the college receive their Bachelor's Degrees in Students interested in partici- Venture Program (Foreign Place- early date. Professor Sloan of and recent graduates who are May of 1977. Application materials Trinity's History Department is considered "Early Entry" appli- pating in (or finding out about) any ment Section) will be at Trinity to are available from the Office of A one of these programs for the interview students who are inter- knowledgeable about the program cants in the Program, Another Educational Services, and the in general and the subject which it 35-40 awards will be made to Trinity Term 19*77 are urged to ested in such placement abroad. deadline for the submission of consult with Dean Winslow no later These placements have been un- will concentrate on. Students are postbaccalaureate persons who are application materials is as follows: advised to read the literature (in called "Late Entry" applicants and than 22 October 1976. Applications dertaken by Trinity students in the Faculty Recommendation deadline: are due by 29 October 1976. There past and found to be most con- the orange folder) in the Office of who apply directly to the Found- 28 September 1976; Personal Ap- Educational Services Reading ation. Preference is given in the is further information in an orange structive and rewarding. There are plication deadline: 29 September folder in the Reading Room of the placements in Germany, France Room before speaking with Deaii "Early Entry" component to per- 1976. Winslow or Professor Sloan. -•*-«, sons under 30 years of age and in Office of Educational Services. the "Late Entry" component to persons 30-40 years of age. Chicago Law Applicants for the Early Entry Richard Badger, Assistant awards may not have undertaken Dean at the University of Chicago any graduate or professional study Law School, will conduct a group session for interested Trinity and News Notes beyond the baccalaureate and must be nominated by Liaison Officers of Wesleyan students at 7:30 p.m. in their undergraduate institutions by Room A310, Lawn Avenue (on the Wesleyan campus), on Tuesday, According to Committee Treas- Each Lecture will be followed November 15, 1976. The Danforth urer J. Michael Kelly, all proceeds by a question period, then by an Foundation does not accept direct October 5, 1976. Dean Badger has Carter to Speak indicated that he will stay as late as from the luncheon will be distrib- informal coffee period. The regis- applications for the Early Entry uted statewide to increase voter tration fee is $12.00 for the series; Fellowships. necessary to answer individual at Luncheon questions. He will also respond to awareness of the issues in major tickets at the door will be $3.00 The Foundation is currently Gov. Jimmy Carter has accept- Democratic areas. Trinity Students with I.D. will be making a special effort to bring general questions about law school admission and employment for law ed an invitation extended by the admitted without charge, wile qualified persons from the racial school graduates as he is President Connecticut Democratic Campaign Lecture Series other students' tickets are $6.00 for and ethnic minorities into the of the National Association for Law 1976 Committee to speak at a American Literature and the the series, $1.50 apiece. profession of teaching. Approxi- Placement. See Mr. Shinkman in luncheon hosted by that committee American Experience, a series of mately 25 percent of the awards are five lectures held on Tuesdays at For more information please the,Career Counseling Office if you in Hartford on Friday, October 1. contact Mrs. Jonathan W. Burr, expected to be awarded to Ameri- need transportation. The announcement was made 1:30 p.m. in Austin Arts Center, can Indians, Blacks Mexican-Am- will begin on Oct. 5 with Dr. Paul Trinity College, Hartford (tel. September 24 by Michael H. 527-3151) or Mrs. Kimber^ ericans, and Puerto Ricans. Cardozo, state coordinator for the Smith's talk" tin "The Puritan Film Series Legacy: Admire the world and Cheney, 102 Whetton Rd., W. Carter/Mondale campaign, and Hartford (tel. 523-8211). Venture Program "Saltwater Celluloid," a film Bernard Kaplan of West Hartford, Trust the Lord". The series will The College Venture represent- series sponsored by the American chairman of the luncheon commit- continue on Oct. 12 with Prof. Dirk ative assigned to Trinity will be Studies and Freshman Seminar tee. Honorary co-chairpersons are Kuyk speaking on "Faulkner and Frasconi Exhibit here on Thursday, 30 September Programs, continues on Tuesday, Gov. Ella Grasso and state party America: Apparently They Can The recent works of Antonio 1976, to discuss Venture place- September 28, with the Brando Chairman William O'Neill. Learn Nothing Save Through Suf- Frasconi, internationally known ments with interested students. remake of "Mutiny on the Boun- Gov. Carter will address a fering". Other future speakers graphic artist, will be shown in the noon-time outdoor rally upon his include Profs. James Miller (Oct. Austin' Arts Center at Trinity arrival in Hartford at a downtown 19), Milla Riggio (Oct. 26), and College from September 28 to site to be announced later. Follow- Stephen Minot (Nov. 9) speaking October 20. The show formally ing the rally, the Democratic presi- on such topics as "The Black opens with a reception from 5 to 6 dential candidate will proceed to Presenced in American Litera- p.m. on the 28th. The artist will be Classified// / ture", "Southern Belles and Good the Veteran's Memorial Coliseum in attendance. The public is invited in the civic Center to speak at the Country People", and "The Ques- to attend. $100 a plate luncheon. tion for 1976: Is This a Successful As part of the exhibition, HELP WANTED SERVICES Party?" Frasconi will present a film entitled Wanted • Cirls to train as masseuses. Top DEADLINES: Classifieds must be submitted by Saturday noon for "Antonio Frasconi-graphic artist" pay, excellent benefits. Apply in person at Service on TV or Stereo. Reliable' and Aristocrat Health Club, 89 New Britain Ave. inexpensive service. Contact Randy. Box 768. publication the following Tuesday. RATES: Students only 154 for the made by his son Pablo, and also Hartford. 522-6913. first line, lot each additional line. NO MAXIMUM. Business accounts give a lecture on the graphic arts Auto owners I Get a complete tune-up for only "104 a word, $1.50 Minimum. PAYMENT MUST BE ENCLOSED WITH froml to 3 p.m. in Room 320 of the WANTED-Part-time openings either morn- $8.00 frp, an experienced mechanic. Call AD. i , ings, afternoons or evenings. Telephone sales 247-4266. Arts Center. work. Earn 4.50-7.75 per hour based on salary plus commission. You must have a Typing-will do accurate job. Call Ms. Bernice 8 pleasant, clear-speaking telephone voice and Be'rman, 26 Ravenwood Road. W. Hartford. CINEMAf 1234 j ~1 I-MEXIT58-5ILVER UNC-R00ERTS ST. an aggressive nature. For more information, 521-3511 ' EUTHARTFOno • 34HR.TEL,IHFO.M«-W1D call 527-8300 Typing-.50/page. Call Lindy 249-2083. CLASSIFIED COUPON ACRES Of n.E6imHTgD PARKING'l*te Haw MASTER CHARGE Please print your ad clearly The Return of the Man Called I "Ik Male or female part-time help wanted to EATING EVENTS Horse (pg) I pump gas at 234 Mobil Station on Washing- The Sprouting Out Vegetarian Cuisine. The ton St. (near Trinity) Sat. 4-10, and/or vegetarian's vegetarian restaurant. Make it Sunday 10-4. Talk to Pete Syskaty. learning experience in Hartford, 20-1/2 Ne< (coming soon) "Burnt Offering' Park Ave., Hartford. 233-6536. Male needed part or full time to work at Subway. Hours are 7pm to 2am Monday-Fri- The Arts Cafe - a non-profit alternate galler Alice in Wonderland (x) Must be day. Take any time slot that is convenient for and vegetarian restaurant. After midnigt IB yrs. yu. Call 246-4616 or stop by 1258 Broad Street music each nightly, 12-3 am. 72 Union Plac« Hartford. 525-0424. Volunteer Researchers needed for Legal Aid Entertainment Part II (pg) Legislative Office in downtown Hartford. Some money available forstudents able to get oftsgo&high school students- Federal work-study funding on own. Work is rt w 6 part-time and irregular, probably averaging Your name: * 'fi! ' ^ »howcas« cinenu 12-15 hours per week, but varrying week to dtocotmtcard r>ow! save 5C week. You must be interested in the problems of welfare recipients, tenants and consumers. Address: Juniors or seniors preferred. If interested call Raphael Podolsky, 525-6604. people keep telling you to Telephone: LOST AND FOUND quit smoking COPIES Payment enclosed: Lost-small gold ring, U.S. Naval Academy cigarettes broken black opal stone. Lost on lower ollege, Hartford 1 fl OlPIf \ intermural football field, 9/14/76. Of family don't listen ... importance. REWARD - Contact Crosby at a they're Box 706 or 249-3942. e probably trying to Returned! Many thanks to the ringers who Vv"asninglon COPIES returned the flower arrangement from the trick you basement of Seabury. My faith In humanity has returnedl Thankyoul into adarber CJ hop COPIES living ,° Say You Saw It WWU YOU WAIT SERVICE For Sale-Sony 4 Channel Reel to Reel Tape Specializing in Haintyling and Deck TC-2774. Perfect condition, seldom used. Asking $400 or reasonable offer Haircutting 249-78%. in AMERICAN! Appoinliijorils Accepted Calulator for sale-4 functions available CANCER J15,00 Call Gary 249-2528 SAL GIOCOIANO, I'm,.. Second Hand Clothes for sale - 1087 Capital SOCIETY The TRIPOD [ 27 litw Britain it^Htfi Ave. Across form the institute of Living i Tel. 247-8255 Wet suit for sale. $45. Contact Bob, Box 63 27 N<-w Britian Ave. 218-6040 Hiirffortl, Conn., 06106 September 28,1976, The Trinity Tripod, page IS More Sports Women's Field Hockey Tie One, Win One Once again, the Trinity wo- Nina MacClean, the forwards per- from the top of the circle. The offense and defense were tight as men's hockey team shot out of the sisted yet only scoring one goal to Although she missed a "free" entire team was strongly supported co-captain Olivia Brown scored in penalty stroke, Bostwick drove thletic center for their first home tie-up the game. Spectacular flying by Lisa Parker's amazing saves in /game on Thursday. Displaying the the first half assisted by Cackie another one in to finalize the score leaps and zinging drives were the goal cage. Half time left Trinity Bostwick. f blue and gold'colors we all know so illustrated by the gruesome-two- ahead 1-0. Determined to keep the well, they were determined to show Despite Wellesley's quick goal The J-V gave another "unbe- some, Crawford and Betman. ball in scoring range, Beth Isham in the second half, Bostwick College a bit of skill and Despite the score (1-1), the lievable" show led by the defensive pushed in the second goal while cracked a shot in giving Trin a 2-1 work of the Plough sisters as they hustle. psyche for a great season is Conn. College was down. A great The varsity game began with lead. Off a fast break pass from romped Wellesley 4-1. Fresh bouncing off the walls of the locker victory for the J .V. stars. Spit Dobbins, Suzanne Herr assited Cackie Bostwick at the center, room each day! The spectacular person Lorraine deLabry got a helped on either side by Wusts and Brown in a line drive for another quick score in along with Debbie •wonder women are ready for action goal. The psyche was definitly high (co-captain) Brown. Together the as displaced by the J.V. perfor- Kunhardt. Beth Bonbright per- On Saturday, Varsity Field with co-captain Alyson Henning, formed up to her excellent forwards worked the ball toward mance. Hockey pulled out its first big win the unsuspecting Conn. College Mara Bentman, Kathie Crawford "Bomber" standards as she led the The first goal against Conn. of the season against Wellesley and Nina McLane working hard on J-V score with 2. The defensive ^goalie. Backed by Spit Doben, College for the J.V. was made by College by a score of 4-1. With (co-captain) Alyson Henning and the defensive line whole Susie work proved the high quality of the Carol Zugg with her strong drive Rosie the Goalie on her toes, the Saltonstall and Carter Wurts kept freshpeopte on the squad this year. Ducks Dive For Draw the passes moving up the field. Be prepared for a dramatic season. ; i by SuperDuck Jimmy "Tiger Yee" Bradt, Scott killing off two consecutive penalties J ! • *. Trinity Waterpolo tied Amherst "The Barbarian" MacDonald, Rob where Trinity was playing a i|p%=8 last Friday night.As the masses "Calby" Calyi, Jeff "Ways" Wag- man-clown. Teichmann tallied for assembled into the Amherst Nata- ner, and goalie Frank "Yard the only goal in the quarter. • *fc. A torium, Trinity's starting lineup of Arms" Grubelich took to the water To start the 4th quarter, Trinity vt,co-capt. Bob "The Dough Boy" with co-capt. David "Macho" sent in their starting lineup to get "I Meyer, Kent "Hawaii-5-0" Rielly, Teichmann looking on. The first back into the game. "Macho" quarter ended in a 2-2 deadlock Teichmann led off things with an with Meyer and Teichmann ac- overpowering forehand that ! Women's Crew counting for Trin's goals. brought Trinity to within one goal, The second quarter had the 7-6. Amherst quickly answered *v"' la, same frustrating pace as the first back with a tally of their own. Rielly Wins Opener quarter with Trinity behind 6-4. then led a commando raid upon the •<*n*-.t • \ " by Mus Musculus The offensive Northam Duo of helpless Amhers^ goalie with a goal i Trinity's women's crew was off "Macho" Teichmann and "Dough bringing Trin to within one goal [ to an impressive start on Saturday, Boy" Meyer tallied for Trin's goals again. With 35 seconds left in the in the quarter. game Trinity was a man-up as a I posting two convincing victories Action in Thursday's Field Hockey game with Conn. College. over Mt. Holyoke. Left with only As Trinity lined up to start result of an ejection foul against Trinity tied 1-1. • • & five members from last year's the third quarter, they Were Amherst. Trinity set up and got the crew, a strong rebuilding effort has informed that the score was now ball to Teichmann at the right post, resulted in three boats, the larges 7-3 Amherst. Somehow, during the with 15 seconds left in the game. turn-out ever for the program, now halftime break, Amherst managed Teich settled the ball, faked a .in its fifth year. to score and' also- take away a goal backhan, head-faked, then pum- JV Soccer Preview **" The junior varsity and the from Trinity. The whole team melled a bullet forehand home for novice boats, largely composed of erupted into a mass uprising with the tying goal; Much credit goes to by JRjdhard Stevenson without a strong bench." new oarswomen, inooats that had the new score, After much protest- goalie "Yard Arms" Grubelich The JV Soccer team will open Kelly considers alf the teams on onlybeen set since Monday, had no ing, the officials allowed Amherst who allowed only one goal by in the its season on Oct. 2, when they will this years eight game schedule to difficulty in setting aside the the extra goal at the same time 2nd half, and to Wagner, Bradt, host M.I.T. at 11:00. be tough, and is especially looking competition from up the river. The letting Trinity's goal tally to remain MacDonald, and Rielly for their Coach John E. Kelly is in his forward to the Oct. 30 meeting with varsity boat nosed out the Holyoke at 4. defensive play at the end of the 4th first year at the helm of the squad. Wesleyan. . ' boat in an exciting finish but was Trinity braced defensively and quarter. Kelly, a 1934 graduate of Trinity, later disqualified for forcing the refused the Jeffs a goal in the third With the tie, the Duck's record volunteered to fill the void in the Holyoke boat out of its lane earlier quarter. Great performances were is now 2-2-1. This Wednesday, coaching staff created when the in the race. turned in by Chip "Oh Wow" Sept. 29, Trinity plays U.R.I, a.% regular varsity coach took a pork /treet The novice boat rowed a smooth Glanville, Mike "Big Red" Hinton, home at 7:00 p.m. Anyone'inter- sabbatical year and the regular JV race, commanding the lead from Frank "Wobo'' Wobst, Chris ested in helping out the team coach moved up to take his place. laundry " Crewcut" Hillyer, and Jamie "Is The thirty man squad, com- "the start, and improving on it (managing) can either stop by the An Ideal Service for steadily until they led by eight there a game today" Hudson. pool between 4:00-5:30 during the posed entirely of freshmen, has "Dough Boy" Meyer and "Tiger week • or dropping by Northam competed in three pre-season STUDENTS lengths when they crossed the Same day service, in by .10 finish line. Yee" Bradt were spectacular in Ledge. scrimmages and according to Coach Kelly, has "looked good," am, out by 4 pm After surrendering a half lenght Clothes washed, dried, lead to the competition at the start, and "shown a lot of promise. "The ATTENTION MUSIC LOVERS key to a winning season, he folded, wrapped the junior varsity boat blasted 880 Park St.-opposite Zion | through to gain the lead after the comments, is "a question of GALLUP & ALFRED developing our reserves, be- 249-2502 i first fifty strokes, leaving Holyoke area's largest sheetmusic-record dealer in its wake as it steamed on to the cause," he says, "no team can win finish line a solid five lenghths ANNOUNCES Jihead. an additional 10% student discount on all LP records The varsity boat pulled ahead (special sale items excluded} m the start and grabbed a three 201 Asylum St. 525-3121 ^quarters lenght lead before their ^steering difficulties began. OPPOSITE CIVIC CENTER Holyoke pulled even just before OPEN e Charter Oak Bridge where they Wght the first of the three crabs Mon-Sat '*PlZ/\W itTUl >jthat were to cripple their race "Bring in lla.m.-12p.m. d^WWikL. Washington St. Allowing Trin'to build up a three Sunday iL'J'V&x&zk (Across from Htfd. 'length lead. It was here that this ad and 12-11 ^^Sgr*!!^ Hospital) Trinity's steering difficulties be- GRINDERS PIZZAS PLUS! Delicious Dinners came noticeable, as they steered D©e will get FOR FAST SERVICE PHONE 527-7764 'too far off the marker and failed to make the first turn. Successfully negotiating the second turn, they lost ahlf a length to Holyoke before 25% OFF { Holyoke caught its second crab. Jewelry, Water-beds, Leather Coming down from the jetty, Custom Made Pipes, Incense Dine In Our h Trinity strained to maintain the ea f ' d but Holyoke pared it down to a Candles, Massage Oils, Head Gear ,i half length before the two boats colleded, meshing oars. After the two boats were back Major Concert Tickets Available ,; "nderway, Holyoke began to come NNER '„ through on what was left of the Oct 3 Aztec Two Step, Pine Crest, Shelton, Ct. LAST • %.l'lue and gold's lead. Driving Pure Prairie League ^"relentlessly, theyy were catchingg Oct. 13 Jackson Browne, New Haven Coliseum NATIONAL ^Trins bow man when their stroke w Oct 24 Tower of Power & Gcroge Benson, BANK T as leveled by the final crab, Hartford Civic Center causing the Holyoke boat to veer "Largest HEAD SUPPLIER in Connecticut I sharply off the course. with the lowest prices" } Next week's races against •. Marist College will start at 10:00 944 Maple Ave., Hartford - 247-4972 a-m. at Bliss Boathouse. Be there. page 16, The Trinity Tripod, September 28,1976

Bants Claw Polar Bears 30-14 for 131 yards in the air hitting on 13 mention. After playing offense all Bowdoin as well as to Brian try The Chief guarding his zone perfectly, snared an errant Bowdoin pass and of 21...Leading Bantam receiver last year and the entrie preseasn, O'Donogue. Brian, out for the rambled to the Polar Bears' 3rd Marc Mantini left Bear defenders he was switched to defensive season with a knee injury, has done The Trinity Bantams treked dead in their tracks with five tackle, due to Jack McDonald's a tremendous job as team manager north this weekend to the wild yard line. Jr, wingback Larry Moody cupped the drive with a 2 catches and a touchdown...Soph- knee injury. With only a few days ...This Saturday, the Bantams t woods of Brunswick, Maine to more John Flynn was deadly on of practice at the new position, meet Bates at Jesse Field. A large^jp engage the Bowdoin Polar Bears in yard plunge. McCandless' conver- sion tied the tilt at 14 all, but the punt cover teams, making 3 "Moose" stepped in and per- fan turnout would be greatly the opening football game of the unassisted tackles..."Moose" formed well. ...The team wishes to appreciated. '76 season. Despite the seemingly fireworks were just beginning. The Bants followed with a 75 yard drive Poulin who felt at home in the express its thanks to the many fans 1602 endless bus ride, and hustle and Maine wilderness deserves special who made the long sojurn to bustle of the overnight trip, the which featured gutsy running by Bants played crisp hard-hitting quarterback Robbie Claflin (who football last Saturday and tho- replaced the injured John Gilles- roughly outplayed their cocky pie) and setbacks Mike Brennan Women's Tennis Posts 2 Major Victories counterparts in every phase of the and Captain Pat Heffernan, the game. Bantams' leading ground-gainer by Melissa Lover umphed with a 6-3 victory over especially competitive. However, the victory was not as with 79 yards. A nifty 6 yard Claflin Connecticut College. Rogers, Jen- The team will face off on the toss to junior T.E. Marc Montini easy as the socre may indicate. The Women's Tennis Team nings, Wallace, and Levin were Jiome courts against Tufts on Trailing 14-7, the super-charged and the P.A.T. made it 21-14 at the successful once again but this time October 2 at 11:00. Last season end of the third quarter. won two of its three opening Bants came out fighting in the 2nd matches of the season last week. the doubles play was most inter- Trinity annihilated Tufts with a half. Three touchdowns and a field Throughout the entire game The first match on September esting, because Connecticut Col- score of 9-0, and this years's hoped goal later the humbled Polar Bears and the second half if particular, 21 was against a perennially tough lege's singles players are used in for victory should be just, crawled off the field defeated and the Bantams played exceptionally opponent, Williams College (Trini- doubles as well, and the tennis was impressive. dismayed. tough defense. Captains Don Gra- ty's only loss last year). Despite the Trinity opened the scoring with bowski and Rick Uluski led the matches won by top singles players 3:45 left in the first half as senior charge, punishing Bear ball bear- Muffy Rogers, Wendy Jennings, quarterback John Gillespie cooly ers. The middle of the line was Betty Wallace, and Sue Levin, the directed the 88 yard march. Early consistantly plugged by noseman team was hurt by bad losses in the in the drive on third and long the Barry Dorfman, and linebackers doubles and lost to Williams again, senior Southpaw scampered left Joe Delano and Mike Leverone. with Final scores of 4-5 varsity, 2-3 and connected with his slick Defensive backs Donny Daigneau, junior varsity. However, according number one receiver Tom Lines. Bobby O'Leary, Dave Janrarski, to Coach Millspaugh, "it is unusual The sure fisted split-end made a and Tony Trivella also played to have all our wins at the top of the classic over-the-shoulder grab, brilliantly, allowing Bowdoin a ladder. It.shows a number of high neatly keeping both feet in bounds. mere 40 yards in the air. quality players." The 40 yard pass proved to be the Offensively, the Trinity interior Not at all discourage, the junior key play in the drive which was line controlled the line of scrim- varsity went out on September 22 culminated by Gillespie's one yard mage throughout the contest. Their and beat the University of Hart- quarterback sneak on 4th down. hard work led to two more Bantam ford's varsity by 5-4, even though Sophmore Bill McCandless added tallies in the fourth quarter, a 32 the top four junior varsity singles the conversion ending the First yard McCandless Field goal and 3 players Debbie Meagher, Laurie yard dive by Mike Brennan. quarter. Balsch, Nancy Thorton and Janice Wendy Jennings displays her strong, fine backhand for a TRIPOD c The second quarter was all ;•.••*. * * •' * • • .- Wilkos all lost their matches in two photographer. The Women's Tennis Team Is expected to do quite A Bowdoin. A 3 yard run and a 25 Bantams notes - Tom Lines sets. Numbers five and six, (Karyn well this season, starting off with a 2-1 record for the week. ' p yard interception accounted for the gave everyone a scare when he Webb and Amy Polayes), lead the 14-7 Bear lead at the half. went down injured in the first team to victory by pulling out two However, the day belonged to the quarter. He spent the night hospi- three-set matches in third set TO ALL MEMBERS OF LAST YEAR'S VARSITY Blue and Gold. Their resurrection talized in Maine with muscle tiebreakers, and the doubles teams AND J.V. BASKETBALL TEAMS AND began early in the third quarter spasams and a concussion, but won each of their matches "rather when linebacker Joe Delano, from all reports he is doing well . handily" Millspaugh said. ALL PERSONS WHO WILL BE TRYING OUT and will be O.K....the Bantams gained 253 yards running while Playing the next day in gale FOR VARSITY AND J.V. THIS SEASON: their 3 Quarterbacks (Gillespie, force winds which disturbed play- college sport shop Claflin and Mike Foye) combined ers on both teams, Trinity tri- There will be an important meeting on SQUASH AND TENNISv! Wednesday evening Sept. 29, 1976 at RACQUET CENTER ^ RIVER FARM& RIDING SCHOOL! a ,7:15 p.m. in the Tansill Sports Room Head ' Davis * Bancroft * Coaches will outline some plans for the upcoming season.- S P EC.tALx'::;;p;n;: squash ' We are .now offering our fall riding term. Expert I Please be prompt. instructor. Special Rates for college students. ® . l;H Now Britain Avenue FOR BOOKINGS, CALL677-8627 1 _ 10 minutes from West Hartford center 5 . Right now, up until Oct. 31st, you can fly roundtrip from New York to Luxembourg for only $360. a 5575 Waterville Rd. Rte. 10 Farmington, Ct. | That's $106 less than the youth fare you'd pay on any GET A KICK iaBaaBBSBnBaflflMBflBBHBBBBBSHBBanBBBRBBBHnBnflllflBHBBBflHff. , other scheduled airline. 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