, ft

Volume XLV HARTFORD, CONN., MAY 26, 1948 Number 26

Dr. ·llTheilh w eimk fe r toN Leave TWrinit y '· 122 nd Commencement [:xerctsesr · Beg ·1n W1 or or avy 1n ashington J h 5 k I Professor of Math une 18 t ; pea ers nclude Taft Was Here Six Years· L k d M I Fleming of Trinity Studied in Berlin I oc WOO ) anca I, Church, NYC, Nevins of Lim, Fandel Given Pi Gamma Mu Elects Dr. Feodor Theilheimer, mathema­ Six Members; Cooper Columbia Also to Speak tician, will leave the faculty of Trin­ Grad Fellowships Two hundred and fifty undergradu­ ity Co ll ege in June to join the theore­ Becomes New Prexy ate and graduate students, the largest tical sub-division of the aval Ord­ The Trinity College faculty has The Trinity hapter of Pi Gamma graduating- class in Trinity history nance Laboratory in Wa hington. Dr. awarded fellowship for graduate elected six undergraduate to will receive their degrees at the 122nd Theilheimer, assi tant professor of study to four outstanding senior . ~1u Elliott L. Mancall and Theodore D. membership at a meeting held last ommencement Exerci es to be held mathematics here al Trinity, will work Tuesday. at 10::~0 Ionday morning, June 21. on basic mathematical research for Lockwood of Hartford, Jam~;;s T. l.im of ew York City and China, and The Trinity Chapter, founded in Preceding the xer ises will be three the Navy. 1936 by Professors Humphrey and days of traditional c lebrations from A native of Germany, Dr. Theil­ John P. Fandel, Jr. of Yonkers, .Y., Troxell is part of a great national Jun 18 to June 20 called Fraternity it was announced today by President heimer received his doctorate from organization formed to honor students Day, Ia s Day, and Baccalaureate G. Keith Funston. the University of Berlin in 1936. He of the social sciences. Membership unday, respectively. Speakers fea- Mr. Mancall was voted the W. H. came to the United States in 1937 is limited to students who have dis- lured during this weekend will be Russell Fellowship, paying 500 a and did research work at Brown be­ tinguished themselves in the study of hades P. Taft of incinnati who year for two years. He is seeking ad­ fore coming to Trinity in 1942 as an history, government, economics, will be the main speaker at the' Open mission to medical school. The son instructor. He was promoted to an sociology, geography, psychology, and Air ervice on Sunday; Rev. Dr. of Mr. and Irs. icholas Mancall of assistant professorship in 1946. Dur­ philosophy. Occasionally the T inity Frcdelick . Fleming of ew York- 86 Colebrook St., IIartford, he is a 1 ing the spring of 1946, he was a mem­ Chapter has elected men distinguished ily, who will deliver the sermon at ber of the Institute of Advanced Study graduate of Weaver High School in in the social sciences in the community the evening hapel s rvice; and Allan 1944 and a Navy veteran. at Princeton, N.J. at large. Last year the late Governor ------vins of olumbia University who He has done research in algebra Mr. Fandell will receive $500 each McConaughy was elected by the chap- - will deliver the Commencement ad- and aerodynamics, publishing several year for two years of graduate tudy ter and there are a number of faculty dress. in English from the W. H. Russell SDC HoI ds Banquet ; papers on these subjects in Germany members in it as well. M b harles P. Taft and the United States. Fellowship Fund. The author of a vol­ ew members are Mike Campo, em e rS tO Wear Charles P. Taft is President of the ume of poetry and several other pub- Ronald Urquhart, Richard Mastron- D• t' · C F d raJ ouncil of the Churches of Barber to Head New lished poems, he has been admitted arde, Bob Fenn, John Pricoupolos, IS lnCtlve aps hrist in America, and lawyer, lee- to the Yale Graduate School of Eng-- John Loegering. Theodore Lockwood, The Sophomore Dining lub held tur r, and labor-relations consultant Go vernment Dept. lish. The son of Mr. and Mrs. John P. retiring undergraduate president, its last meeting of the year in a ban- to the Monsanto Chemical Co. During Division of the Trinity College De- Fandel of 727 Midland .6..ve., Yonkers, graduates in June. George B. Cooper quet in ook Lounge last Thursday the war he was drafted for emergency partment of History and Political . Y ., he is a graduate of the Charles succeeds Professor Humphrey as with Presid nt Funston and Dear.s service in Washington as Director of Science into separate departments E. Gorton High School. permanent president. Professor Hum- Hughes and Clarke as guests of hon- ommercial War Services in the Fed­ for History and Government was an- Mr. Lockwood was awarded the phrey has served since the founding or. Pr sident Brenton Harries wcl- era! Security Agency. A member of nounced recently by President G. $1,000 Mary A. Terry Fellowship for of the chapter in 1936. He has also corned the new member. and guests the President's War Relief Control Keith Funston. a year of graduate study. The son o± served as national treasurer and and summarized the activiti s and Board, he was also director of the Dr. Laurence L. Barber, whose Professor and Mrs. Harold J. Lock­ province chancellor. Professor Can- plans of tlie undergraduat honor OITice of Wartime Economic Affairs title is being changed to Assistant wood of 6 Gray St., Hartford, he is delet succeeds Professor Troxell as soci ty. and of the Office of Transport and The formal dinn r mm·k d the enJ ommunications Policy in the State Profe sor of Government, will head a graduate of Northwood School at ecretary-treasurer. the new department. Dr. D. G. Bri:1- Lake Placid, . Y., and is married of the first year of th club since its Department. Besides being a director ton Thomp on, associate Professor of to the former Miss Elizabeth Anne reappearance after the wartime hiatn.; of seven corporations, he is now a History, will be acting chairman of White of Tuckahoe, N. Y. His fath~r The 1948 Ivy will be out at of one of Tl·inity's old st and mo t trustee of the Twentieth Century the department of History following is professor of engineering at Trinity. the end of this month. Orders active soci ties. Th So1-homore Din- Fund, of the Carnegie Institution, ing lub was organized 1897 to chairman of the board of Trustees of the retirement in June of Dr. Edward Mr. Lockwood will stud at Princeton. a1·e now being taken by Joseph 111 act as official stud nt nosts of Taft School, and junior warden of F. Humphrey, departmemnt chair- Mr. Lim received the Charles J. VctnWhy, at Coole C-13, and th~ college. A Pr sident IIaJTies incinnati's hrist Episcopal Church. man since 1915: Bennett Fellowship of $150 each ye2r B1·uce icholson, at Wood­ point~d out in his summa ·y, onP

Musical Notes Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. By George to\\ e

Member Associated Collegiate Press The Xew England :\Iu ic Critics Symposium (re­ cent!\· held at the Juliu Hartt chool of :\Iu ic) was gil·e; a great deal of publicity by the local papers, but Published weekly throuJrhout the ncad<•mic year by the STU· there wa: probably little said there ·which ha - not been DENTS 0~' TRINITY COLLEGK Sub: cription $:1.00 l><'r Yt,.r. n·hashed many time before. It must have been encour­ Student subS"ription Included in tuition ft•c. Ent.ert·tl nt Hnrtrord. aging. though, to the a sembled writen; that, of once, Conn .. as s<-cond elM~ matter Ft·brunry 1-1, 19·17, ur11ler th• Act uf March 3, 1 '79. The columns of THE TRINITY TIUI'OD are at nil I the ubiquitous question-Why i a critic ?-wa left times open to alumni, undergraduate • nnd otheri'J for the diffcus· out of the discussion. &ion or matter8 of interest to Trinity mt'n. rt was a healthy and vigorou ign that there were a few strictures hurled against the kind of music re­ viewers who do their profes ion little good-against Editor-in-Chief Robe-r~ Ilt·rlwrt. ·;,o writers who do more to alienate the general mu ic­ Managing Editor Ltt.e, '51 list the four types of critics in the small community Exchang<>-RRting Editor Robert Jenkins. '49 whom he found hardest to take: they ranged all the Fea.ture Editor G<'Orge Stowe, '·19 way from the "smarty" who is a perfectionist to the Sports Ct>-Editors Marshall Rankin, '60, William W<·tt.,r, '50 Fraternity Editor Evan Woollacott. '50 cub whose critici m contains all the musical minutiae Rewrite Editor E

1 Fred Campbell Elected New President T rin Profs Retire; 1nter-Fraternity Sing Is Big Success Have Given 76 Years ( ( Of Jes t ers; 8eatt1e · Ch osen 5ecretary Combined to College rows apture an d Retlre . Moms · ( up Fred Campbell wa elected presi- I Last Wednesday evening, in the dent of the 11·inity College Jesters last Chcmi!;try Auditorium, six of the col- Thursday to ucceed Don Craig, who lege fraternities and the Commons will graduate in June. S:~m Edsall Cllub participated in the eighth an- was elected vice-president, following nual Tnterfratemity Sing. Alpha Chi the creation of that office by the Sen- Pho won the singing contest for the ior Jester · herman Beattie wa~ Robert . Moni, Cup for the third elected secretary, and Don Reynolds time to retire the trophy. business manager at the same meet- The purpose of th annual sing is ing. to enc·ou1·age the fraternities to ar- Previou;; to the elections, at a range, conduct, and present such a meeting of the Senior Jesters, Bruce mu,;i(·al program on their own initia- Nicholson, Sam Edsall, and Don Rey- tivc. ;\lr. !\Torris is an alumnus of the nolds were named Senior Jesters. class of 191G and of Alpha hi Rho Other Senior J ester are Otis Charles, fraternity. Don raig, Mike Campo, Fred Camp­ bell, ::-.leal Edgar, Sherman Beattie. The prog'l'am wa presented in the Joe Brush, Pete tokes, Phil Hale, following order: and Ken \Vynne. O.f this group, on!~· Delta Phi, A Delta Phi song, Dem Beattie, Campbell, Edgar, Ed all, and Bones; P i Upsilon, the Brahms Lulla­ Reynold~ will retum next year. by, the hrine ong; Della Kappa psilon, Eveline, I'm a Son of a During the past year the J ester· DKE; ommons lub, Trinity Col­ have produced Dear Ruth, . 1a que of lege II ymn, Free 1en are We All; King , and Men iu White. Don Craig Sigma u, A-Roving, White tar: has been director of all these plays, Alpha hi Rho, Go Down flloses, Wake while the lead have been taken vari­ Fre;;hmen, Wake; Alpha Delta Phi, ously by George Desartes, Joe Brush, Dr. Humphrey (Above) Shenandoah, 'Vc omc with a Song P ete Stoke , and Mike Campo. All the and a hout. production s wer given at the Avery Dr. wan (.\t Right) Memorial. The three judges not affiliated nith the college, included Gordon Again this summer some of the Stearn;;, musical director of the First Jesters will operate the Pitchfork burch of hrist in West Hartford, Playhouse in Sharon, Connecticut. Dr. Swan and Dr. Humphrey will field College, then attended Tufts then returned to olumbia for hi,; Weston Brockway, head of the Chol·­ Last summer this group produced retire from active teaching on the Meclical School where he received his Ph.D. in 1912. lie has publishecl al Club at Weaver High School, Wal· The Male Animal, Out of the Frying faculty of Trinity. Both will be 70- doctorate in medicine "ct::m laude" in " ationali sm and Relijrion in Amer­ ter hiller, a I ading Hartford chor­ Pan, Personal Appearance, They years of age when they retire and will 1903. He tudied later at Harvard ica, 1774- 1789" (1924) , which r mains alisi. Knew What They Wanted, and Dear become professors-emeritii. School of Public Health and Graduate the authority on this subject in Amer- By unanimou decision of the Ruth. Dr. Swan retires after 43 years as School of Medicine. He was director ican History. He has also made many judges ihe Alpha Chi Rho group, led professor of Physiology and Hygiene of the gymnasium at Wesleyan for contributions to scholarly journals by Paul Thomas, won first place and and Medical director of the college. two years before coming to T1·inity. and edited several volumes. He was wa · presented the cup by Mr. Mor­ Since he came to Trinity in 1905, to- During World Wat· I, he was com- in tt·umental at Trinity in foundin~t ris, who spoke briefly concerning its day he i senior active member of the mandant of the American Red Cross the Political Science Club and the hi story. Th ommons Club led by 11 Men of Theta Xi Faculty. Sanitary Unit o. 2, and also served local chapter of Pi Gamma Mu, na- Bud and herman Beattie, placed Dr. Humph1·ey has been ortham as a contract surgeon for the Army. tiona! honorary social science frat rn- Initiated on May 23 s cond, and Sigma Nu, also winner of Professor of History and Political Until 1929 he was head of the physi- ity. He ser ve d as chairman of the the cup twice previously, was given Last Sunday afternoon, May 23, Science since 1915. He was the col- cal education department at Trinity. High chool ommittee for th ity third plac . eleven members of the Trinity Colony lege's only history teacher when he He is a member of many Hartford of Hartford, and was cxecutiv sec­ of Theta Xi Fra ternity were initiated Icame to Trinity 34 years ago, but he and Connecticut Medical societies and retary of th onnecticut om mitt e into the Alpha Mu Chapter at Am- now heads a department of seven a fellow of the American Medical As- for th Am erican Historical Associa­ herst College. The new brothers who teaching scholars. For 33 years as sociation and the American Public tion Fund. He is a former gov mor will form the nucleus of the charter head of the History department, he Health Association. and now honO!'a l'Y officer of the onn. group at Trinity when a chapter is has influenced an army of stud ents A native of Winnebago, Minn., Dr. Society of th Descendants of the granted are: Martin Parlin, William by his character. Edward Humphrey received hi s B.A. Founders of Hartford. His fraternity Roving Reporter Robinson, John Hatfield, Grant Me- A native of Providence, R. I., Dr. degr ~ e from the U. of Minn. in 1903 is igma Alpha Epsilon and he is a Walking on air over the college Intosh, Rodney Crittenden, Richard Horace C. wan first received a phys-. and his M.A. degree from Columbia in member of many educational and hi s- during most of the past year has Schultz, Warner Behly, William Aus- ical education degree from pring- 190 . He tudied at the U. of Paris, torical societies. given me ample opportunity to ob­ tin, Robert Richmond, King How- serv many unforgettable incidents. ard, and rorman \Vack. These men will take charge of the pledge train­ It was a long time ago when the Freshm n arriv d, but I se m to re­ ing for the succeeding initiates, and mcm her them as being younger than in becoming brothers themselves, they Morse Shepard Allen Acidly Reviews the Trinity Review the average student who matriculated have accomplished one of the most the previou;; fall. important tasks towards receivmg Has Good Words for Poems of Coote and Herbert their charter. Forced down by continued spring In the dignjfied opening article words of the brook. As it laughs and answer confines hills demand," for showe1·s, I was on hand to enjoy a The new brethren who were guests knight unto knight sheweth knowl­ is tickled by the moss on t he stone," instance, is not poetic ambiguity but very successful Senior Ball-125th An­ of the Amherst Chapter over the edge, a Sir Alfred Zimmern com­ but even he ends by asserting that grammatical anarchy. It arouses the niversal·y Weekend. Realizing the weekend were honored with a wel­ ments on . ir Richard Livingstone's "We live in the shadows, terrified by suspicion that so much obscurity may emptiness of this revi w of the year comh1g banquet Sunday evening recent visit. Sir Alfred i very com­ the light." We may believe we have be hiding a poverty of sustained in its entire objectiv ity, I determined which was attended by numerous vis­ plimentary to everyone concerned, come to real cheerfulness with Cot·­ thought. The poem leaves me weary, to seck out the prominent B.M.O.Cs, itor f rom t he Hartford area. Among even hinting that British institutions nelio de Kanter's naturally-written and a little sad-that so much sensi­ self-sty! •d or otherwise, and get their the guests were Deans Arthur H. might be hying to refashion them- account of the high-chair doings of a bility and poetic capacity has here reactions on the •vents of the past Hughes and J oseph C. Clarke of Trin­ elves on the model of this college. baby; surely it is too young to realize been of so little avail. y a1·. Anxious that their answers ity Co llege, Mr. William Carson, o wonder he is persona grata here. what a sorry world this is, we think The manifestoes of our thr e politi­ might not be li mited, l asked them President of the Theta Xi Alumni Frank Lambert in "The Spite -until it begins "a piercing, blatant cal clubs naturally have nothing new the following qu stions: I - "What Association in Hartford, Messrs. T. 0. Fence" gives us a knock-down and hriek." to say. W. L. Simons, Jr., nourishes \\'as the best thing that happened to Cole and David Wade, also of the drag-out fight, in which the Lord's I enjoyed R. W. Herbert's "Poem" the tree of Democratic liberty with you this y at·?" and 2- "What was Hartford Alumni Association, and side wins over the glowering limb of on his impre sions of West Africa; it pleasant and literate prose. The young the wors ?" Mr. Ralph M. Williamson, the Colony's Satan who "fights Canawl-style." is pleasingly original in its straight­ old-Republicanism of D. S. Smith is Ed Faber told me that his being faculty adviser. This addendum to "Rome H aul," forward style, although its device of less amusing here than in his orporal picked to play in the East-West Dur ing the past week, Theta Xi efficiently carried through with Mr. loose blank verse with a maximum of Blimp "Tripod" articles; he is merely game was the best thing that hap­ admiring ihe strong muscles of his was pleased to announce the pl edg in ~ Lambert's accustomed ruddy vigor, run-over lines approaches being, but pened to him. lie said the most di sap­ party, flexed for ovcmber's knock­ of two new men, Julian P erry and is more readable than significant. The never quite becomes, prosaic. It is pointing thing, not t he worst, was out blow. R. D. Prigge, for the "Lib­ Robert Rentz, which brings the total title of G. W. Stowe's "Melody Played saved by the carefully chosen and having to turn down a prof ssional erals," has a high aim but shoots off number of brothers and pledges to l 5. Sweetly in Tune" indicates his un­ often effective vocabulary. J. W. basketball contract because he's going too many blank cartridges. pretentious explanation of how Robert Coote's "Sonnet" is smoothly conven­ to Harvard Business School next In I. C. Wade's "Take Four H's," Burns composed his lyric poems. tional, even to an intrusive "does" year. used as metrical padding. "Bojo" by all the .four apparently stand for L. C. Overton's melancholy binge, A few minutes later I met Bernie "Be11t Reeds Break," must have been T. C. F. Lowry seems, to this sober­ Hate. onsidcrable suspense is worked up before John the gentleman Grona ambling contentedly along the a considerable pleasure to write; read­ sides, a piece of whimsey that never Dr. Johnstone Speaks ranker is shot in the rear by Hawkins main walk. Berny hai ls from Torring­ ing it is another matter. I suppose whims; it reminds me of Gertrude the hateful sergeant, but better mo­ ton and is the scourge of all saloon Yesterday, May 25, the Protestant every sensitive young author has to Stein's Miss Fune, conscientiously tivation of the sergeant would have men who endeavor to make a profit Fellowship had its final meeting of give vent to hi s discovery that the determined to be regularly gay. lightened the story's handicap of im­ off their pin-ball machines. As a mat­ the year. The activities of this f inal world is not nice, but it is a relief to J ohn Fandel, whose volume "The probability. As it is, it is almost a ter of fact, it is rumored that all the Year have centered around the lec­ the reader when the hero, "spewing Seasons' Difference" has just appeared, success. pin-ball machine vendors in Toning­ tures made to the club by representa­ up fountains of poisonous vomit," offers "Sentence for Departure," t he The editors of the "Review," includ­ ton got up a pool to send Bernie to tives of various Protestant churches. ceases hi s contemplation of "expecto­ most pretentious poem in this "Re­ view." Mr. Fandel is suffering from ing Mr. Gleason, are to be thanked for Trinity. Joe Garcia hopes their action Last night, Dr. George Johnstone, a rate mucus" and "loathsome buckets­ an attack of modernitis, of which this an attractive if not an outstanding may be unconstitutional. Bernie gets profe . or of Early Church History full of blood and intestines," and poem is a symptom. Its subject is issue. Incidentally, the proof-reading most of his meals off the pin-ball and the ew Testament at the Hart­ finally prepares to jump in the river. that of "' eath the E lms," whose has been exceptionally good. If my machine and says that he never felt ford Seminary, spoke on the hi story His main failing, I thouight, was pro­ simplicity affects the reader more than comments seem insufficiently sweet­ more depressed than when the men and beliefs of Presbyterianism. This crastination. This chalice of sour does Mr. Fandel's intricate embroid­ ened, I trust the contributors will came and carried away the "Manhat­ lecture, as -all those previous, led to milk is followed by Jonathan Lam­ ery. Besides, he drops too many remember that "faithful are the tan" m achine. He said it was his the di scussion of many theological bert's "Sonnet" as a chaser, in which stitches: his "travelers . . . eed not wounds of a friend." baby. Points during the question period. we share his "pleasure to hear the Page Four THE TRINITY TRIPOD May 26, 1948

And So it Goes By Bill Wetter Bruce and Don to Leave The J!raduating- class of 1948 will include several athletes who have been key factors in Trinity sports for S('Vcl·al yean;. The most notable g1·acluatcs Both Men Respected who made their record in football are captain Rog Bcstor, 13ob Boland, anrl Golfers Whip New Britain by 10-8 Score By Everyone at Trin Johnny Fink. Be ·tor anchon•rl the team at eenle1· and was recognized as a By Dick hitabile Yery leader, as the team <'nded up with a G-1 record. Boland was ~apable But Lose to Wes, Amherst, and R. I. State \\'ith considerable sadness we at rated as one of the best wing backs Trinity has had, whil<" Fink playNl end Trinity bid farewell to Don Phelps and when his broken wrist permitted. Bruce .:'

Hilltoppers Drop Close Game to Yale By 7-6 Scorei Sports Horizon By ;\[ar. hall Rankin Julavits Is Losing As Misplays Cost Game For the la!>t i!;sue of thi. year, perhaps a quick review of t he Spring Frank Quinn Is Ace .ports activity at Trinity would be in order. The antics of Dan J essee's In Relief for Yale \ arsity diamond men are particularly interesting. By Bob Blum Georgetown 7, Trinity 6 On Wedne day afternoon, ~1 ay 19, During the Ea t r vacation, the var ity initiated the current campaign t he Trinity baseball team wa taken by dropping a 7-G 10-inning decision to Georgetown. J oe Julavits went t he from behind by a fighting Yale team, route. but ;{ hits apieca by \ hi tey Kunkiewicz, Marty Rouse, and J ack and beaten 7-G, on a single by Dick :\£ahon were not enough to ·win . Tettlebach with George Bush on sec­ • avy 2, Trinity 1. At nnapolis on April 3, Jack Scull y allowed t he• ond base. Yale expended three ;\hddics exactly lhrec hits, but one of th s wa a four- m~ ter by avy"s mediocre pitchers before calling on arl Goodie! with a mnn on ba e, providing th margin of victory. avy's the s rvices of their mound ace, F rank hurler, Ron Burton, also pitched thr c hit bnll. Qui nn; while Trini ty's J oe Julavits Trinity 2, (Wingfield 2. In a 16-inning thriller, Trin and t he Baystaters went all t he way for the H ill toppers. battled to a stalemate; the game finall y was called because of darkness. Although touched for ten hits, Jul­ Julavits pit hed the entire game for the Hilltopper . The contest was marked avils was able to keep t hem uiTi cient­ by br ill iant oulfi ld play. ly ca tter ed, excepting t he fourth in­ Trinity 7, oast Guard 2. Playing their fourth consecutive tilt away ning, when Ya le pushed over fo ur runs from home, the Hilltopp rs finally broke t h icc a nd came t hrough with t heir on four hits and a costly error by first win of th' y ar. Scull y pitched 6-hit ball and struck out thirteen batters. Shortstop Bob Barrows. These four Red Faber and Kunkicwicz clout d homers f or us. olumbia 7, Trinity 5. On April 24, t he Hilltoppers traveled to New runs tied the score at 5-5, and after York' Baker Field, and lost a close decision to the Columbia Lions. Homers another tie score at 6-6 in the sixth by Ra kowski and Thelan p lied defeat for Tr in, these accounting for three inning, Yale went on to win on Tettle­ run s. bach's hit in the eighth. Trin Bows to Chiefs Trinity First to Score The umJ>ire i calling Jack Mahon safe at first a George Bush, Yale's first Hartford hiefs , Trinity 4. Trinity could not quite match the class Trinity opened up smartly with ba eman, take late throw. Del mith is Eli econd ba eman in background. of th prof sional t am, as the Chiefs t allied fiv e runs in the second and Heintz drawing a walk, and advanc­ Rog Bestor (25) i coaching. lhird innings to provide th margin of victory. Jack Mahon played well ing to score by means of a wild pitch, f or Trinity. and two fielder's choices. Yale quickly Moher's Hit Ties and aided by fine def nsive play, the Amherst 8, Trinity 5. The Lord Jeffs came to TJ.·inity Field for the first tied it up with Art Moher walking, Bush hit his second single to score Yale ace was never in trouble. In the of two cont sts with the Jesseemen, and walked off with a doubtful victory. stealing second, and coming home on Goodyear, and Bob James, pinch- eighth Yale broke the deadlock when The home squad committ d eight errors afield, and the pitching allowed seven a ingle by clean-up man Richard hitting for Duffu , blasted a double to Barrows error, a sacrifice, and 'fettle­ free ticket . Trin assumed an early lead, but. the multitude of errors cleared Mathews. Julavits then struck out score Smith. Moher duplicated it, bach's well-timed hit paid off. Quinn the path for an Amherst rally and victory. Goodyear to retire the side. Trinity scoring Bush and James. Tettlebach put on the steam in the ninth when Union 4, Trinity 3. The Hilltoppers on Mayday lost their fourth straight went ahead again, as Ed Faber hit out to Rouse to end the inning, but he fanned Kunkiewicz, Scully, and decision to the Schenectady aggregation. Scully allowed the viSitors only reached first on an error by Yale the score was tied 5-5 . Faber in order, doing it on eleven eight bingles and struck out six men. However, Union's Bob Bartlett lashed pitcher Duffus, advanced to third on In the sixth, the J esseemen pushed pitches, all of them strikes. out a screaming double to drive in what proved to be the two winning Captain Marty Rouse's single, and Hal Heintz across on a walk, a sacri- 1 The box scores: markers. came home with two outs on Del fice, a long fly to center, and an error Trinity ab r h Yale ab r h Trinity 5, Wesleyan 3 Moher . .., H eintz, cf 1 2 0 Smith's error at second. Trinity on Yale's third-baseman on an at- Barr ows , ss 4 1 0 T ettleb"ch . cf ~ ~ ~ The apex of the Spring season was reached on May 4, as the Jesseemen lengthened the lead in the top of the Redden, If ~ ~ whipped the ardinals on th ir home field by a margin of two runs. Two tempted double-steal, which also ad- ~~~~~.z:. ab ~ ~ ~ Math ws. 3b g third by another run when Mahon vanced Whitey Kunkiewicz to third. Scully, rr 5 o o Goodyoar, rf 3 1 o errors by Wes' second baseman, Schumann, ullow d the winning runs to score. Russ, c beat out an infi eld hit, and moved The di sputed play of the afternoon ~~::e~ : ~rb ! ~ ~ F elske. c ~ g ~ Joe Julavils pitched brilliantly, allowing but 5 hits, walking only one, and around on a fie lder's choice, passed was Kunkiewicz's attempted steal Pitkin, c ~ o g Breen, r( ~ ~ striking out 10. 1 Smith. 2b ! ball, and scored on Faber's safety. home, which was ruled abortive as Julavits, P Bush, lb 4 2 2 Trinity 14, Williams 8. Trinity made a highly-regarded Williams nine Totals . 34 6 6 Duffus, p Fourth Inning Played Sloppily Pitcher Woodward rifled the ball to J a mes ~ ~ ~ look sick as Kunki wicz sparked the Trin attack, banging out a homer and Catcher Felske for the putout. W oodward g g g a triple. Roger Ladd pitched well in reli f. The ·fourth inning was the longest R osn (>T, p and most poorly pla yed of the game, Yale came quickly back to score Quinn, p 1 o o Trinity 12, MassachuseLls 4. With Julavits pitching good ball, striking with costly errors on both sides. Trin­ on two hits and an error by Rouse, 1 Totnls. 34 7 10 out 10 men, the pupils of oach Dan Jessee routed the Baystaters by a size­ ity picked up two runs in its half, to an oddity for the lean second baseman. I Trinity 1 1 2 o 1 o o 0-6 able margin. The Mass. team made innum rable blunders in defense. Ya le 0 0 4 0 1 0 1 x-7 move in front 6-1. Julavits was Felske singled again, and Breen came ,....------, Amherst 10, Trinity 0. The Lord J effs broke a three-game winning walked; Heintz sacrificed him to sec­ in to run for him. Smith advanced streak, as we suffered our fir t and only shutout of the season at Amherst. ond; and he scored all the way from him to second on a single, and Rouse Typing of Theses, Clark Rainey allowed the visitors but three scattered hils, while his mates the midde sack, as Yale's first base­ muffed a peg fi·om Mahon while cover­ pounded Scully and Ladd. man Bush let an easy peg go through ing first base on a bunt by Bush. Papers, etc. Trinity 14, Worcester 12. In a sloppily contested game, on Trinity Field for an error. Barrows advanced to Quinn came in to pinch-hit for Rosner RATES FOR STUDENTS during the 125th Anniversary celebration, the home team came up with 2 third as Mahon grounded out, and (who had replaced Woodward half runs in the last of the seventh to provide the winning margin. Jessee used scored on Tony Kunkiewicz's tower­ an inning earlier), and fanned. Jul­ ISABELLE A. DENSLOW four pitchers, with the last of these, huck Chapin, being credited with the win. ing double down the right field line. avits walked in a run by giving Moher Call 9-0179 after 5 p. m. Yale Wins on 5 nearned Runs his third walk of the afternoon, and Scully ended the top-half, rolling to All Day Saturday and Sunday Last Wednesday, Yale eked out a 7-6 win over the Hilltoppers. Julavits the second baseman. then got the Blues out on an infield pitched well enoug h t o win under ordinary circumstances, but the Bulldogs Matthews led off for Yale, and lined play and a fly to Rouse. Will Call For and Deliver Material tallied no less than five unearned runs. out to Kunkiewicz on one of the day's Tettlebach Breaks p Game best bits of fielding. Then Barrows Facing the Yale pitching star, CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS bobbled one to allow Goodyear to Frank Quinn, Trinity's offense slipped, Come In and See Our Fine Selection make first, which proved to be a costly THE GREETING SHOP mistake. orm Felske, formerly of FORDHAM UNIVERSITY Tlinity, knocked out a single to ad­ 260 Trumbull Street vance him, but was put out himself SCHOOL OF LAW (Between Pratt and Church) on a fielder's choice by Smith . NEW YORK . 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School of Law HARTFORD 24 I Asylum Street 302 Broadway, New York 7, N.Y. HARTFORD CONN. ( f I eublein I I otel) COLLEGE GRADUATES Would Do Well to Look Into the Field of Printing WEDNESDAY, MAY 26 , As a Worthwhile Career HOLIDAY THURSDAY, MAY 27 CASE, LOCKWOOD & BRAINARD CO. An Adventure in A Division of Connecticut Printers, Incorporated ESTABLISHED 1818 HARTFORD I CONNECTICUT {" Good Smoking DRY CLEANING College View Tavern ! atic in ~ A-tOf!l ~ 3 Hour Service 215 Zion Street the pack ··· ~ PRESSING WHILE YOU WAIT GRINDERS and SANDWICHES Af?rnatic ~ COLLEGE CLEANERS CLAMS ON THE HALF SHELL ~tli!Mr.fJII 130 I Broad Street - Hartford OUR SPECIALTY in tbe . e' p\? 0 346 " ADJSO AVEXUE, CO R. 44TH T, " WYOR K 17, N.Y. ~ ~I 46 ' 'EW BUR Y, CO R. BER KELEY TREET, BOSTON 16, MA . ~ THE BOND PRESS, INC. Printers of the Tripod ~/e/.D""'~/~/~~/~ 94 Allyn Street Hartford, Conn. -- Page Six THE TRINITY TRIPOD May 26, 1948

Treasurer of the Junior cla . In the the Halls of Alpha Chi, we com·lude club 1. Also last week it wa · noted ophomore cla , :.\loon Curtin and the Crow·' portion of thi. column for that the indefatigable "Fergy" wa Down Fraternity Row Bob Elliott will be President and ec­ the year. here be~towing his benignancy up~n DELTA PSI : With finals looming om-J \Ve-;l<•rn Maryland, Jim McClister was DELTA KAPPA EPSILON: The old the Beta Beta. Well, "Fergy'' is sttll retary-Treasurer re pectively. The inouslv before us, the brethren are typing a letter of ac<:eptan!'c to a d · t'll het·e bestow- unciergrads of the chapter exten'l " J order <:hanges ... .Jim Page, .John indefatigable an ts s ' · g irding themselves about with knowl- :ummcr position offered him at Pitts- Siegel, Court Pagr, Bill Wil~on . . . ing hi~ benignancy. Se\·eral big even~s their congratulations to the brothers edg·e for the clash. Clad in the adam- burgh's " athedral of Learning." th' ek The XI who are graduating in June. thl•re are too many othen; we hate to have occurrec1 ts we · • antine armour of inclu try, Peter Bt·others Paul White and Steve Harp- · lv wa -< THETA XI COLO, ry take plea ure sec go. What they havt• given the hapler at Wesleyan grac10u. . · Young is setting a knightly example, et· w re attempting to over·come con- If ou:e, we can hardly thank them; ho:t to all of our thirsty horde. In in announeing the pledging of Louis t he emulation of which will bring flicts between "Basic Understanding 1 t baseball Raden of Bryn :.\Iawr, Pa. Robert E. we cannot n·pay in kind. The leaving the afternoon there wa a 10 ·e.s to all. Engaging the last of the Balt't1ese Rate" and "IntermPd- · a ·arhott Rentz of We. t Hartford, and Julian Succ - of these mc•n will leave Alpha Chi le:< ,· game which turnec1 mto a m 1 .n1h t'tt the bi-annual assault on the iate Basket Weavin"'" at the Uni· h H \'et· with P. Perry of Shelton, Conn. ongratu­ tl " I " than what it was. We hope that they at·ound the base pat s. owe books are senior Brothers Mitchell, \' er·::;it~ of C'alifomia Summc·r- School. h k few of lations are al o in order for the re­ will return oftc·n, and won't forget a case of beer on eac · ac ·, a Dunn, harlcs, Elam, Gariepy, Glaz- "Bill" Billing ley, Hobby Ilc•istand, 'd d 't -..va~ more cently initiated Brother Robin. on, us, the friends they made in fout· the Brothet·s <1 cct c I ier, l\lm·tin, and Walmsley- th last Skip Elemcs, Robbie! Hale, ancl Dill 1 d base In Parlan, Howard, Hatfield, Mcintosh (interrupt<'

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