TRINITY COLLEGE LIBRARY." RECEIVED QCT2I 1975

'.RD. COKM.

Vol. 74, issue 7 THE TRINITY October 21, 1975 Trinity College Hartford, Conn. Trinity BieentenniaS Festival Set For Spring

by Leigh Breslau of the music department is 1) The contest is open only to 5) Any medium may be used poster, and may at its discretion organizing a variety of concerts, currently enrolled Trinity College provided it can be mass also reproduce the second prize In March of last year a com- and Judy Dworin, dance director undergraduates. reproduced by either photo-offset winner. In each instance ap- mittee of Trinity students began has proposed a series of four 2) All entries are due at the Dean or silk screen process. propriate credit will be given to the organizing a bicentennial festival lecture-demonstrations concerning of Student's office by no later than 6) Entries must incorporate a artist. for the spring semester of 1976. The the history of American dance. 4 p.m. Friday, Nov. 21, 1975. En- Bicentennial (1776-1976) theme or 10) The contest judges are Mr. Bicentennial Commissions are now The Trinity Coalition of Blacks tries submitted after this time motif and they must include the Robert Cale of the department of being finalized as the nation's 200th (TCB) will sponsor various cannot be considered. phrase "Trinity College Bicen- Fine Arts and Mr. Gerald Fasano, birthday approaches. programs for the Bicentennial 3) Entries are to be 18 by 24 in- tennial Celebration." Publications Supervisor of Trinity. The organization, advised by J. Commission. Additionally, many ches or reproducable in those 7) No contestant may submit All decisions of the judges are Ronald Spencer, dean of students of the historical reconstructions proportions with a space that will more than two entries. final. is now implementing these many such as Williamsburg, Sturbridge equal 5 by 8 inches for specific 8) Contestants should indicate Copies of the rules can be ob- plans to collate a calendar of the Village, and Mystic Seaport have information to be added in prin- clearly on the reverse side of their tained at the Dean of Students' bicentennial celebration. Each contributed information and ad- ting. entries their names and campus office in Hamlln Hall. It is believed department is developing a vice as to Trinity's celebration. 4) No more than three colors addresses. that programs of all the Bicen- Bicentennial- related symposium, The Fairtree and Kennedy may be used in any entry (in- 9) First prize is $50 and second is tennial events will be presented to and the Watkinson Library is Galleries as well as the Museum of cluding the color of the paper $25. The College shall have the Trinity students at registration for furnishing related exhibits. the City of New York have been stock.) right to reproduce the first-prize Spring Term. Dr. George Cooper of the history asked to send travelling shows to department is scheduling a Trinity. President in Insurance City discussion of England's point of The Commission is asking the view of the Revolution. The Meade Mather Board of Governors to Lecture in history will be given by support three major festival ac- Professor Willard M. Wallace of tivities, namely a Crafts festival Fordt * fresh Sf art For America" Wesleyan University who will representing Early American to Hartford from Washington were Napar said, "None whatsoever. As lecture on Washington's role in the craftsmanship, a "Melting Pot" by Meri Adler Revolution. Professor Frederick, festival celebrating the U.S. Representatives Ronald a matter of fact, I thought they Rudolph of Williams College will heterogeneous nature of the President Gerald R. Ford Sarisan and Stewart McKinney. were cheering the President, for a discuss college life during the country, and a giant birthday party stressed that he will stand firm on As the Ford party debarked from while." Revolution. Professor J. Bard for the nation. his plan to cut 28 billion dollars Air Force One (The Spiriti of '76), Napar also said that ap- McNulty of the English depart- At present; all students are in- from the federal budget in an they were greeted by Governor proximately five hundred security ment has contacted Morris Ernst, vited to present ideas and join the address before a Connecticut Grasso, National Guard and State personnel were present for the author of Utopia 1976, in hopes of Commission if they wish to by Republican State Party fund- Police officials, and other Con- occasion. including the writer in the lecture contacting Leigh Breslau at P.O. raising dinner last Tuesday at the necticut state dignitaries. Protestors held signs which schedule. BOX 680 or tel. 249-3274. Hartfoi-d Civic Center. The White Ford received a silver bicen- included calls for money for )obs Of a less academic nature, the A contest is scheduled to produce House billed Ford's after-dinner tennial medal from 14-year-old and not for war and freedom for >mmission is arranging for (he the official poster which will be remarks as a major speech. Mora A. Welter. Cyprus. presentation of an original choral used to announce coming events Ford arrived at the Connecticut The President greeted members A spokesman for the Armenian work by the great American and all students are invited to enter Air National Guard base at 6:05 of the crowd with handshaking, as group said, "We represent the composer Virgil Thompson by the the commission's poster contest. p.m. He was greeted by a small the Secret Service guided him to Armenian National Community concert choir. Dr. Clarence Barber The rules are as follows: crowd of National Guardsman and his limousine. He then left the air protesting the administration's their families. base for a cocktail party at the action on lifting the embargo on Preceding the arrival of Ford, Sheraton Hartford Hotel, given in arms to Turkey, a barbaric nation Connecticut Governor Ella Grasso his honor by the Connecticut that committed aggressive acts for was asked whether she expected to Association of Realtors, where he many years." speak with Ford about "the hard addressed that group. Inside the Civic Center's Ford Campus Traffic Goes One Way issues." Grasso replied that Ford The scene outside the Civic room (so-named for the occasion), "just came in for a little while, and Center was low key, as the press there was an estimated one I don't know whether there'll be bus arrived. Ford had already thousand people. People seated in On Monday, October 27, 1975, a driveway behind the Life Sciences opportunity for further joined the realty group at the the Ford Room paid $l25-a-plate one way traffic pattern will .go into Building, Motorists traveling in discussion," Sheraton. Trumbull Street was for the dinner and ceremonies. effect on the new Austin Arts either direction must come to a full The Air National Guard base was blocked off by the police. Adjoining the Ford Room, box Center loop road. Motorists en- stop before crossing this blind blocked off on all sides by Con- Although some protestors were dinners and grandstand seating tering the campus from Broad St. driveway entrance. A mirror has necticut State Police, and security outside the Civic Center, police did were provided in the Lincoln Room must follow the road around to the been placed in position so that measures seemed extremely tight, not have a hard time controlling for those contributing less than front of the Austin Art Center. No motorists may see if a vehicle is with sharpshooters on the roofs of them. Major Napar of the Hartford 1125 to the Connecticut Republican right turn will be allowed on the coming out of this driveway, and a airplane hangars overlooking the Police said that security was tight, Party. new section of road behind the vehicle coming out may see if base, and Secret Service watching but the crowd was not difficult. Head table guests in the Ford Austin Arts Center. another vehicle is approaching the the crowd and the press. Asked whether the police had Room included the President; area from the north. Accompanying President Ford any trouble with the protestors, Senator Lowell P. Weicker; U.S. Motorists exciting from the Representatives McKinney and chemistry and library parking lots Sarasin; Frederick K. Biebel, must turn left onto the new section republican state chairman; Lewis t-'of road behind the Austin Arts P. Rome, minority leader of the Center. Caution is urged for both state senate; Gerald R, Stevens, motorists and pedestrians when minority leader of the state house; crossing the sidewalk between the and Mrs. Shirley Scott, republican back corner of the Austin Arts candidate for mayor of Hartford. Center and tennis courts leading to After dinner Bieble greeted the Ferris Athletic Center. A President, In his opening remarks, crosswalk will be painted on this Bieble said "The enthusiasm you sidewalk pavement, and a caution have seen here tonight is a sign sign will be posted. that the Republican Party of Connecticut is once again on the The one-way pattern will begin move," He said that the party at the intersection of the South made 130 thousand dollars that Campus road and the Hallden evening. Parking lot road. Motorists exiting Bieble also criticized the we Hallden parking lot may turn democratic leadership of the state. , either way onto the South Campus "Despite their promises of fiscal road. The same is true at the in- responsibility and no tax in- rersection of the Life Science road creases, the state administration and South Campus road. has given us one of the biggest tax increase programs of our history," No parking is allowed at any he said. wme on any of these roads, in- He went on to say that the state eluding the roads into any of the democratic administration has ^aforementioned parking lots. A shown itself insensitive to the • special reminder is issued that needs of the people and has proven ^Parking is no longer allowed on the itself unable to cope with the pad into the chemistry parking problems of economic recovery, unemployment, and energy. President Ford greets the crowd of Connecticut Republicans at New traffic control signs are fhe fund raising dinner held Tues., October J3 at the Sheraton- (Continued on page 2) located at the loading dock blind Hartford. page 2, The Trinity Tripod, October 21, 1975 Trinity-AIESEC Hosts Northeast Regional Conference special committees at the National chefs, Mark Kupferberg and Hal conference was concluded with a by Mike O'Brien President, Jack Orrick, Vice- Conference in Dekalb, Illinois this Smullen. Saturday night's banquet discussion of special projects and I President, Mike Gilman, December were interviewed by the of roast beef, potatoes, vegetables, the upcoming national and in- Solicitations Chairman, Hal ternational conferences. Ad- f members of the National Com- etc. was a gourmet's delight. M Not even a rain drenched Smullen, treasurer, Stephanie mittee. Committees at the National On the agenda for Saturday night dresses were exchanged and | weekend could put a damper on the Boryk, exchange controller, Conference will include a local was a cartoon, Three Stooges everyone expressed hopes of spirits of 90 AIESEC members at Michelle Rubio, France, Reidar committee status review, a short, and feature film "Bonnie making the journey west to Illinois the 1975 Northeast Regional Saugstadt, Norway, Holly Naka, planning committee, and a special and Clyde." Afterwards ensued a in December. Conference. reception officer, Nancy Mc- projects committee. successful party that was still Carthy, publicity, Roxanne The next major event for The menu was one of the going strong at 3 A.M. AIESEC - Trinity hosted McKee, Kim Burns, Mary Ellen AIESEC-Trinity is October 29 Breault, Mark Strickland, Charlie weekend's high points, with master Like all AIESEC people who find when they sponsor a talk by representatives from 15 Nor- chefs, Mark Kupferberg and Hal time to work and party hard, theastern universities at the Bathke, Frank Holmes, Steve Michael J. Hamburger, V.P. of the Roberts, Connie Bienfait, and Jim Smullen, having little time for sleep, early Federal Reserve Board in New conference held at the Institute of Sunday morning everyone mun- World Affairs in Salisbury, Con- Gascoigne. Also in attendance was The menu was one of the York. necticut. The weekend was Mike O'Brien, National Advisory weekend's high points, with master ched on some donuts and the designed as a workshop revolving Counselor for AIESEC-U.S. Miller To Give Third around AIESEC's chief goals; supplementing student's Mellon Lecture Friday night, members attended Dr. Charles Miller, professor and theoretical knowledge with a get acquainted party, where the practical business experience, and former chairman of the physics music arrangements were handled department, will present the third promoting international by Mike Gilman and Jack Orrick. cooperation and understanding. in a series of six lectures Discussions at the meetings held established by a grant from the Saturday dealt with various Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Fourteen schools, extending AIESEC programs. The lecture, will be held Monday, geographically from Georgetown October 27 at 8:00 p.m.'in the Life to the University of Rochester plus Sciences Center. four members of the National Initially, the large group was Committee gathered together to divided into experienced and The Mellon lectures focus on discuss and analyze the various unexperienced students in three main problems: the use of strategies and problems found AIESEC. language in literary and non- within Northeast local committees. literary contexts, the role of ob- servation in the social and physical One session dealt with training, sciences, and the nature of formal Jack Orrick of Trinity chaired preparations, and problems in- vs. verbal theories in all the conference, and along with the volved when soliciting a company disciplines. rest of the Trinity' chapter, hosted with the goal of raising an AIESEC The topic of Miller's lecture is the largest, and perhaps most internship. A later session "Quantum Mechanics: In- successful, Regional Conference reviewed the entire AIESEC ex- terpretation and Observation," He ever. change program, including details will discuss some of the paradoxes of the application and the In- photo by Steve Boberts inherent in quantum mechanics, ternational exchange to be held in Dr. Richard T. Lee, professor of Included in the Trinity Zurich, Switzerland this Spring. Representatives from 15 Northeastern universities attend delegation were Mark Kupferberg, Students interested in working on philosophy and former chairman AIESEC Conference. of the department, will comment, ... Ford Asks $28 Billion Budget Cut

(Continued from page 1) annually on policies sold nation- Bigger government, Ford said, He said the best way to achieve right. We're now in a position wide by Connecticut companies means higher taxes. The President fiscal responsibility is to convince where we spend much more money Concluding his remarks, Bieble and that the bulk of these called for a giving of freedom back Congress that the American people than we are taxing pooplfrfot, The said the Republican party in premiums are reinvested in to America. want tax reduction and spending only way to provide for continued Connecticut "was sick and tired of America. limitation. tax cut or even a continuation of being the other party and was Ford said the 28 billion dollar tax going to do something about it The President then began to hit what we're doing is to cut spending reduction would serve as a fresh Ford went on to say that com- someplace, and there'll be a lot of starting now." on the major points of his speech. start for America, along with a mitment to fiscal responsibility Labelling the tax burden as too hard arguments over where the Bieble's remarks were warmly matching limitation in the growth was a founding principle of the dollars should come from," received by the audience. heavy and the spending rate as too of federal spending and a balanced Republican Party, along with local high, Ford received cheers from budget. control over local problems, a But I think that the concept is Ford began his address by the audience. vigorous free enterprise system, correct," he continued, "and that saying he was glad to be back in The President said 75% of the is to say that if we're going to cut Ford said Congress placed the greater freedom of the individual, Connecticut and reminding his people would be affected by this in and dignity for all of society. taxes, we have got to cut govern- audience that he had lived in New tax burden on the middle class and the form of personal exemptions mental spending. I think yes, the Haven for five years. that what the Democratic and that 25% of business would also government spends and wastes too Congress believes in is "tax and gain by this move, since it would He concluded with a call for the "Trying to drive into Hartford in Republican Party to lead and much money, and is in too many tax,: spend and spend, elect and provide and sustain growth to help areas that it should not be in," he particular is always a very elect." He called for a turn-around create capital for production of serve. "We must demonstrate fascinating experience for anyone anew that the Republican Party is said, "and there are areas where of this policy. jobs needed to provide incentive we can cut obviously we're going to in politics. With all of those in- for industry to expand, modernize, prepared to lead and to serve the terchanges, overleafs, bypasses Republicans, he said, tax less and improve. 214 million American citizens, gore a lot of oxes." and on-ramps and off-ramps, you and spend less. He asked for the responsibly, responsively and In response to the same question, have the exact same problem the restoration of stability and effectively." Senator Weicker said, "It depends democrats have in Congress. No Ford said those who deserve help development of sustained growth will continue to receive it and that Ford received a standing on what they're cutting, I don t matter which way you go is in the economy and putting the want to cut housing, health or wrong," Foi"d said. there would be no slashes in ovation. fiscal house in order. defense forces needed for Asked if he thought Ford could education. If they want to cut a Ford then commended the "A government giving us protection of the United States. cut 28 billion dollars from the little off of the defense and the Connecticut insurance industry, everything we want is a govern- budget, U.S. Representative wasting bureaucracy that's okay, saying that Connecticut insurance ment big enough to take from us "If we let federal spending Sarisan said, "It isn't going to be but let's not stop the growth of the premiums pay 13 billion dollars proceed as it has for the past easy, but conceptually I think he's country." everything we have." thirteen years," Ford added, "half the people will live off the other half by the year 2000. Ford observed that the budget has increased 300% over the past three years. He said he would like to see a budget not in excess of 395 billion dollars, which constitutes a cut of 28 billion dollars from last year. This, he conceded, will mean a cut in federal programs. The President reminded his audience that he was interested in the people's interest and not in the interests of special interest groups. Ford said the 90th Congress cut the budget under a democratic administration, so a budget cut is possible. Ford charged his "can't do Congress," "It can be done. Why not do it for the benefit of America?" Ford went on to say that if Congress continued to send him legislation that exceeds the spending limit, thereby threatening the tax cut, he will use photo by Al Moore his veto. He said the veto is not a photo by Al Moore ^ negative power, but a con- From right, Conn. Republican Chairman Frederick K. BiebW, Protesters outside Hartford Civic Center picket for money, jobs stitutional authority, which says, and an end to U.8. intervention in Cyprus. "look at this again." Ford, U.S. Senator Lowell P. Weicker, and U.S, Representative Ronald Sarasin say grace before fund-raising dinner. October 21, 1975, The Trinity Tripod, Page 3 Who Roles The Roost? Student Government At Trinity * by Steve Kayman Association (SGA): The Student Affairs, Curriculum, Academic responsible for providing a faculty or the administration) in mi Government Association (SGA) is Dishonesty Board of Appeals, balanced schedule of diverse social their respective areas. it,}' Power tends to corrupt and ab- the general representative body Board of Inquiry, and Student Life. activities. MBOG is made up of 24 The three adjucative com- jr,f' solute power corrupts absolutely. for Trinity students and concerns In the past, the SGA has worked elected students, six liasons from mittees, also with student mem- ,1 -Lord Acton itself with all issues relating to on the issues of student the SGA, and one administrator. berships in parentheses, are as student life. It is composed of 36 representation on the Board of MBOG is divided into four major Understanding student govern- follows: elected students, one ad- Trustees, the expansion of Mather subcommittees: concert and Academic Dishonesty Board I ment at Trinity is thought by many ministrator, and a liason from Hall, the establishment of a dance, lectures, cultural events, f»f to be an impossible task. Fur- of Appeals (4) faculty and trustee committees Rathskeller on campus, the im- and small activities. Board of Inquiry (3) 8 thermore, many students may with fewer than three student provement of medical services, the Faculty Committees Board of Reconsideration (2) IK question the necessity of em- members. improvement of campus security, These are committees that were These committees, as well as the Hi, barking upon such an arduous The SGA sits atop the student the quality of food at Mather, and once made up entirely of faculty Academic Affairs Committee, are lei. effort: "What does studentr government structure, sets policy various political issues. and administrators, but have since discipline boards, acting on an government dd, anyway? for the Budget Committee and Any student who would like to opened their membership to individual basis within their Yet, in order to fully understand Mather Board of Governors attend an SGA meeting or who has students. Like the trustee com- respective areas. Their what's going on around campus, (MBOG), and holds elections for ideas for the SGA to deal with, is mittees with student members, proceedings are strictly con- and even in the Tripod, a basic all student positions. It sets the urged to come to SGA meetings, they constitute a sort of quasi- fidential. anj familiarity with the workings of amount of the student activities fee which are held each Wednesday at student government. There are two sits student government is invaluable. (currently $70) and has the final 7:30 p.m. types of faculty committees: Trustee Committees hird And learning to comprehend at say in collecting student funds 2) Budget Committee: The policy making and adjudicative. For the past two years, students Jre least the overall structure of (about $130,000),-acting upon the Budget Committee (SGABC) is the .The policy-making committees, have served as members of four of 0,, student government is not as recommendations of the Budget student finance committee, with their student memberships in the Board of Trustee's standing j01t difficult as it might at first seem. Committee. responsible for co-ordinating parentheses, are as follows: committees. In general, students jay Since student government was The SGA, through its Con- student activities, allocating the Academic Affairs (3) comprise about 25% of the com- 1^. reorganized last year in a stitutional Committee, recognizes $130,000 Student Activities Fund, Athletic Advisory (3) mittee's total membership. The referendum passep d byy the student au student organizations, approves and approving student College Affairs (4) four committees, and the number „ body, its structure has become constitutions, and adjudicates organization checks. All decisions Curriculum Committee (4) of students on each, are as follows: j! more centralized, consolidated, complaints involving student made by the Budget Committee Financial Affairs (2) Buildings and Grounds (2) an,.„,_„d hence, easie. r to grasp- - . Sim- organizations. The . College may be appealed to the SGA and In each of these committees, Capital Campaign Committee (1) a plisticallyl , student government at Facilities Committee of the SGA are subject to SGA review. The students are in the minority. Library Committee (2) Trinity may.be divided into three recommends policy for the ad- Budget Committee is composed of Although they are called policy- Student Life(3) categories: student committees, ministration of Mather Hall and 12 elected students, three liasons making, they are actually more The committees usually meet 24 faculttyy committees, and trustee other related facilities. The SGA from the SGA, and two ad- advisory in nature, with the times a year, and make recom- committees. Security Committee is an appeals ministrators. possible exception of the mendations to the entire Board of re is board of parking violations and 3) Mather Board of Governors Curriculum Committee. In brief, Trustees, within their respective It,. Student Committees makes recommendations on the (MBOG) MBOG is the student they make recommendations to the areas. Students are not members These three committees (or operation of Trinity Security social programming committee proper authorities (the entire of the Board of Trustees itself. rather, the SGA and its two sub- Twice a year, the SGA publishes committees) constitute Trinity's the Course Evaluations, STUDENT BODY sort "real" student government, Three members of the Budget iw providing those services that are Committee and six members of FACULTY COMMITTEES STUDEHT COMMITTEES TRUSTEE COMMITTEES ma; commonly associated with a MBOG are appointed by and from student council or a student the SGA. The SGA also appoints Academic Af f airstf*. —»• J~..-» \ - •Buildings and Grounds association: representing student one student from among its t* prStudent Government Association (SGA) interests at the College, controlling membership to faculty and trustee Athletic Adviaory Jt- ——4- - I student money, and putting on committees with three or more I Capital Campaign Committee social events. student members: Academic College Affairs >^——— V 1) Student Government Affairs, Athletic Advisory, College Mather Board of Curriculum Committee^ .. •• •Budget Committee Governors^ ... ALibrary Committee Financial Affairs « ' ' , MBOG Appeals Budget 47 ___«. S^Btudent Life Judicial Committees SGA Committees ifad T Committee Decision Academic Dishonesty- Constitution (CollegJe Facilities of Appeals %" Committee > Committee by Henry B. MerenS and the present-day popularity of On Wednesday, October 15, Getz, there would be no problem in Board of Inquiry Security Committee/ Course Evaluations Larry Golden, chairman of Mather getting enough people to attend a Parking Appeals Board Board of Governors, appealed to second show.' The first concert the Student Government would then be transformed into a Board of Reconsideration^-— Association for $1350; Golden won dinner show, with tickets priced the appeal. The money which is accordingly. allocated for the addition of a Golden said he hoped that the yes," second show for the December 6 additional money could be drawn 9 Club "T". ^ out of the Contingency Fund so that Key On Monday, October 13, Golden MBOG would not have to solid line - elected from student body had requested $1000 from the SGA jeopardize the money previously dotted line - appointed from SGA Budget Committee, to be drawn allotted to them for events of this out of the contingency fund (The kind. MBOG noted that they amount was later increased to believe the concerts will take in, $1350 as a result of an anticipated enough revenue to pay back at cost increase). least part of the money requested McKee Named ASPA This year, at the Main Show, from the Contingency Fund. MBOG will feature Stan Getz. The Budget Committee, in MBOG thought that as a result of denying Golden's request, noted Award Chairman the success of last year's Club "T", that the risk involved in giving by Marc Blumenthal MBOG $1000 of the remaining $5200 He served as the first general membership in ASPA. The contest The appointment of Dr. Cyde D. chairman of the New England is open to undergraduate juniors in the Contingency Fund was too and seniors and masters degree great in relation to the amount of McKee, Jr., associate professor of Regional Conference of ASPA in I Position Open political science at Trinity as 1967. This regional conference, an candidates in public ad- time remaining in the school year. organizational model for ASPA, ministration. The College Affairs Committee In addition, monetary needs of national chairman of the Grant Garvey Student Manuscript Award has since been structured ASPA founded in 1939, is the (CAC), a faculty committee, has a the other 32 student organizations, nationally on the basis of ten such largest national organization of student position open, due to a they said, could suffer. Since the Committee of the American Society for Public Administration regions. individuals interested in public resignation. At the request of the Contingency Fund also exists to administration. Its members come committee's chairman, the provide funding for newly (ASPA) was announced by ASPA McKee is also the former president Randy H. Hamilton. director of the Percival Wood from all ranks of government, Student Government Association organized groups and ad-hoc ("one including university faculty, (SGA) will appoint a student to McKee has long been an active Clement Constitutional Law Essay shot") groups during the course of Competition. researchers, students, non'-profit serve until the next schoolwide the school year. member of ASPA. In 1967, he was the moving force in the creation of John Garvey, a former national agency employees and private election, which will be held in Upon the denial of his request, industry employees who work with January, the Connecticut chapter of ASPA. director of ASPA, established the Golden appealed to the SGA. Grant Garvey Student Manuscript public administration. The student who is temporarily The discussion at the appeal Award in memory of his son. McKee remarked that the aPPointed may, of course, run for hearing was highlighted by Golden 1 Professor McKee's committee is creation of the Grant Garvey permanent election in January. speaking for MBOG and James composed of nine members (in- Student Manuscript Award by the The College Affairs Committee is Essey, chairman of the SGABC, cluding one student) from all national council of ASPA indicates composed of four students, four speaking for the Budget Com- regions of the United States. The the respect which public ad- faculty, and administrators. It mittee. committee is responsible for an- ministrators have for the ideas of concerns itself with student life on The emphasis of Golden's speech nually selecting a topic for an our young men and women. campus and has attempted to was on the projected success of the essay contest, screening the He said "Trinity College has had improve relations between faculty event. Essey centered on the papers submitted, publicizing the an outstanding record in the and students. importance of not having to delve contest, and malting awards to Percival Wood Clement. Con- In the past, the Committee has into the reserve Contingency Fund student winners at the national stitutional Law Essay Competition approved new parking lots and of $4000 in case there should be an conference of ASPA. during the .past five or six years^ vehicles for security, made emergency of some kind. This The topics under consideration Therefore it would be my hope, recommendations on the ex- would occur if the aforementioned for this year include "Ethics and that our undergraduate and pansion of Mather, and sponsored $5200 in the regular Contingency the Public Service" and "The graduate students would see the « series of student-faculty parties. Fund were expended. Future of Public Administration in ASPA Grant Garvey contest as an lne Committee generally meets The SGA, after a speech by its opportunity to demonstrate ev the Bicentennial Year." The ery other week. president Steve Kayman, who winning student essay will be literary excellence in the field of AnJ' students interested in noted that the reserve Contingency published in The Public Ad- public admihistratiQri." serving on the College Affairs Fund is left unexpended year after ministration Review, the McKee also observed "that our 0t, ^ommittee should: submit a letter year and should be put into professional journal of ASPA. The students will be competing against 01* » ^e SGA, Box 1388. The SGA will practical use, voted 27-9 in favor of Dr. Clyde D^ McKee, Jr. winner will also receive a $200 cash some of thejtnost talented graduate " maltn the appointment at its Oc- Golden's appeal- award as well as two years free students in the United States." 29 meeting. Pa 4, The Trinity Tripod!_0ctobw_2l. r>75 1*

Last week, the Student Government Association heard powerless to object. «„,„„ its first appeal from the SGA Budget Committee under our The SGA unbelievably reversed the SGABC recom- new system of government, and the results seem to in- mendation. This obvious lack of responsibility in dealing dicate a flaw in the system. „„•»«„ with the issue, which, as $130,000 of Student Activities Fee It seems that MHBOG requested that the SGABO monies are at stake should upset each and every student, allocate them an additional $1350.00 from the Contingency was shown by the fact that the entire matter was dispensed Fund so that they could recruit a higher priced act for the with, by the SGA, in less than 1 hour, with many members upcoming Club T. This money would be paid back, if never having heard of the Contingency fund before! possible, from the profits of the show, however, this should The Tripod is indeed afraid of the precedent established be looked at as an outright grant as no money was by the SGA's actions. At this rate, only major interest guaranteed. The SGABC was extremely excited about the groups will get money while the smaller groups, the ones show. Realizing, however, only $6000.00 was initially in who, realistically, are the ones who cannot get the funds Contingency for the year, the SGABC felt that it should not elsewhere will be out of luck, and perhaps out of existence. risk the Contingency Fund of 33 organization's on the ex- The SGABC was formed expressly to handle the Student pected profits of one group. Normally this fund is used for Activities Fee; we elected its members because we felt the funding of new organizations - or new allocations or as they were capable and impartial. How can their recom- a last resort for ones which cannot get the money mendations be taken so lightly? The Tripod suggests that elsewhere. In the past, those expected revenues have been in any future appeals, a 2/3rd's vote be required to grossly miscaluclated (Tom Jarriel for example). MH- override the SGABC. At least in this way, we can be sure BOG, being allocated around $18,000 does have additional that it is individuals with well thought out convictions who monies from which to draw, and were thus advised by the are voting. The appeals system is a good one, but only it SGBC to "borrow from themselves." In this way, should does what it was intended to do, protect the rights of the monies not be made up, only MHBOG would be afr everyone, not just a group, as in this case of MHBOG fected, not the other 32 organizations which were enthusiasts. Rebuttal This week's editorial criticizes the SGA for granting the Contingency should be spent on programs that interest MBOG additional funds for the "Club T," an event to be the student body. held on December 6. Criticizing the SGA is fine, but, un- The SGA believes that the "Club T" is such an event, one fortunately, the Tripod editorial only touches upon the of great interest to students. The purpose of having two issues, and misses the primary controversy: Is there shows is to allow all students an opportunity to come; last enough money? year, people were turned away from the "Club T" because There were two main reasons behind the SGA's decision tickets were sold out so early. to guarantee MBOG against possible losses at the "Club Even if MBOG is not able to pay back the "Guarantee T": first, a feeling on the part of the SGA that sufficient loan," the SGA feels it is money well spent. To endanger funds were available and second, a conviction that the other activities for the sake of one is self-defeating, In all event was worthwhile and should not endanger other probability, there will be excess funds at the year's end. MBOG events. Why let money remain unused? Why not spend the money In regard to the "money question," the Tripod points out on programs that benefit the student body? that only $6000 is in Contigency, but neglects to mention One additional point requires attention. The Tripod that $4000 is also allocated for Reserve Contingency. recommends that a 2/3 vote of the SGA be required to Historically, this money has never been used, and it is overturn a Budget Committee decision. Certainly, this is difficult to justify not using $4000, only to guard against an idea that deserves consideration. But, in this case, it "possible crises." would not have mattered. The vote was 27-9 in favor of Another reason the SGA felt there was enough money is granting MBOG the guarantee against possible lo&ses. The that only $800 (out of the $6000) has been allocated thus far. SGA - a body far larger and thus more representative ffiaflT Traditionally, most organizations ask for money at a the Budget Committee - was very decidedly in favor of the year's beginning. As the year drags on, fewer and fewer appeal. If the SGA is agreed to be at all representative of requests for funds tend to arise. The SGA feels that all of the student body then clearly, the majority has spoken, Letters I retired to a safe distance from music playing from the eighth floor solely because""ol our race, fl" 'liberated annoyance' which I could watch other students and decided to see what was going delineation between college To the Editor: Solidarity. I gave her a fair chance being annoyed, students who were on, as it appeared to be a party of students and Hartford citizens was Last week I was accosted by a and told her that my moral sen- too liberal to admit that they were sorts. Arriving on the eighth floor made while no measure of respect woman who was pushing a 25* sitivities were antagonized only annoyed and that they wished that we passed by the room, paused to is exhibited toward either per- scandal sheet called New after I read a couple of articles; So, the New Solidarity people would be look in, then proceeded to the sonage. There was a need to in- removed to Career Counseling or seventh floor where we rode the vestigate the presence of two bla<* some other equally obscure grotto. elevator down to the lobby. Upon people on the floor housing a white- Tripod Don't get me wrong, I'm as our arrival at the lobby we were attended party, but no desires w liberal as the next mensch, And met by security and asked if we communicate with them. TJf when the revolution comes I'll be were Trinity students and t6 "problem" is dealt" with \f Editor-in-Chief among the first to distribute my present identification. The point personally, We felt a definite Mark Henrickson record collection to the proletariat. should be made that my roommate disregard of our integrity. Hell, I'll even take the car off of my and I are black. We were the only As black studentB on « Managing Editor 'Marxism Now' bumper sticker. 5 Wenda Harris black students either of ue saw, predominantly white eampt) ' K. Cragin and we were the only students we've had to deal constantly wit" News Editor °>i , Classless stopped by the security guards. an attitude of dlsconctm. While *« Merl Editor intolerable The implication is that the • wilj have to continue working i« Iliglan movement of black students on the communication, white students can become complacent afl« Editor attitude' college campus is restricted in the r To the Editors: eyes of the white community. We construct an insulated w» j On Sunday October 19, 1975 at do not blame security for this in- sheltering them from involvement, approximately 3:45 a.m. my cidence for thej' were obviously thus negating racial harmony. roommate and I were walking asked to stop us, not the other four This letter should ptpm through campus as it is not unusual students, afl white, who tode the awareness of the point .of view £ same elevator we didj® toe eighth titters to take walks (at least not for us) at the poeple on this, campus. A roo» eft Dufr any hour, when we reached the floor. This room full of people was Ml of people judged two others») intimidated by us, two passers-by, their appearance only. Such P^ Jeanin vicinity of High Rise. We heard 1 Steve Kay 'curriculum judgement cannot be tolerate* lane Schwa programs." (Trinity 1975-76 an atmosphere of supposed tellectual enlightenment. To the Editor: ca,^?Pe> P1 10< Paragraph 3.) The Curriculum Committee While I recognize the values has recently been discussing of a libera} arts education en- imposing a limit upon the compassing many areas of number of courses a student study, I do not feel it iS ad- The Trinity TRIPOD, vol. M may take in his or her major for visable to make requirements fssut 7,, Octobtr 21, 1975. T(ie which (s)he may receive credit m the hope that students will TRIPOD is published w«*kly on diversify their schedules. I Tuesdays, except vacations/ towards graduation. r As a student representative think we must respect every during the academic y« ' individual's intelligence to Student subscriptions are in- on this committee, I strongly "legislate" for himself or cluded In the student activities urge all students to let their herself. (mi other subscriptions »re voices to be heardm this issue. *W,O} pw year. The TRIPOOls The ejig Personally, I am opposed to The committee may take a action on this matter in the near pmm by the Palmer Jou™ ! written and edited entirely any such requirement for Register, Palmer. Mass.* sn° several reasons. Most im- future. Therefore, I ask all e students to express their published at Trinity Col!*9 ' portantly, it would represent a opinions. I, as well as all Hartford, Conn. O6104. Secofl" step, albeit a small one but one members of the committee class postage paid at Hartford still to be recognized, away Connecticut, wtder 1h» ^ ... want to hear your views. It's af from Trinity's open curriculum March 3, nn. Advertising r y important that students speak 3 policy which states, "...students are si.ao per column Inch, J *; up! Just drop a quick note in my r h(l are ultimately responsible for p*r quarter pa««, *«• P* i box and it may make a dif- eaQl the shape and content of their ference. Thank you. , and $126 for «tv\\-p*9 lfcjdividHi academic October 21, 1975, The Trinity, Tripod, Pageg

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Don't A Cry from the Moritilands This Issue Get the Heat On! There was little or no heat in not a landlord who wasstart, the situation is very by C. P, Stewart With the evidence we had at- some rooms in the High Rise "closed" for the weekend. uncomfortable. (No one enjoys tained from the electric eye dorm over the weekend of sitting at their desk with a 42 It's funny the way this school counter we went to see Buildings October 17, 1975. The tem- This situation is offensive. degree breeze caressing them.) runs like clockwork. Every time and Grounds Hedge deputy I.B.A. perature was in the low 40's That students are subjected to A lapse in heating is un- we north campusers cruise toward Hedgehog and questioned him as to during the night and in the poor and irregular heating derstandable, but a weekend class by way of the clock tower the reasons for the college's fifties during the day, ac- conditions says something lapse in the servicing of the arch and then through that inefficient use of its money and companied by rain and early about the facility with which heating is not. nuisance the administration tries energy. With bureaucratic flak- morning freezing rain. At- students are abused. (That to pass off as a hedge, we find Mr. Hedgehog infbrmed us that tempts to contact Buildings and students put up with it says In the interest of fairness we ourselves honored by the fact that this particular hedge was not Grounds were fruitless (they something about their urge the administration to they are willing to replace the under his jurisdiction and he were "closed"). knowledge of their abuse.) devise a more viable hedge every two weeks or so. What referred us to one of his colleagues. It seems that a certain kind of Having been issued an explicit emergency procedure and to this does is provide us with the abuse exists where students set of guidelines for us to follow make public this procedure. opportunity to destroy school Sven Swanson then told us that the in our housing contract, we hedge was replaced because it was housed in a dorm do not receive We the undersigned hereby property and take out all our griefs the services warranted by the understand that there are rules on the Monty Pythonness of this in direct line of view to the Quad and rights of both the college submit that in the interest of from Dr. Lockwood's office in the situation: functional utilities fairness, the administration fortification of shrubbery. I'm and services that maintain and the students residing :n a trying to look at it a little more clock tower, and that if the hedge dorm. This makes it clear that devise a more viable were not replaced every two weeks those utilities. Were these emergency procedure; to be practically, though and suggest students tenants renting from a the right of the residents of High that maybe Trinity could save it would not be aesthetically Rise to have heat throughout made public so that all Trinity pleasing to the President and he landlord (which in effect they residents are aware of its some money if the hedge were are), and had the heat failed, the cold months either does not entirely removed. might get mad. exist or has in this instance been existence. We deplore the the landlord would have been possibility of a repetition of this I pointed out to Sven that Dr. obligated to remedy the violated with no immediate The fact is that each time a new Lockwood was only interested in outrage. path is made through the hedge it situation immediately. At least correction. looking at the rabbit on the parking there would have been a course is replaced by a new hedge just like lot on the other side of the clock the old hedge which costs the of action for the tenants to take, It's cold, and with poorly Signed by 46 Residents tower from the hedge. At this Sven insulated windows at the out- of High Rise school hundreds of dollars and got disgusted, threw down his hoe depletes the treasury of the in- and stormed off probably to get terest accumulated by the hedge Dean Spencer to put us on a three funds. day suspension. We conducted a simulated in- Later we learfted, as we had vestigation on our own and in- suspected, that Dr. Lockwood stalled an electric eye on either really didn't give a hoot about the Another SAGA Conspiracy side of a brand new hedge that hedge. We interviewed the horse's filled in the gap. And sure enough mouth himself and he said that by Arthur Robinson the first day many pairs of male with all the money spent on It has taken me two Parents the difference. because they complain about a legs went right through the new replacing the hedge Trinity Weekends, but I have finally seen food service which gives them hedge. Of course countless others probably could have constructed a through SAGA's plot by which they On Sunday, the last parents roast beef and sundaes. If the kids went undetected by the radar as monorail that would have taken us protect their reputation when the leave by mid-afternoon, which is are spoiled, it is because, as Emile they jumped over the hedge. We directly to class making all the parents arrive on campus. The about when brunch is served, and Zola held, the food one eats did note, however, from a nearby stops on Long Walk. food service has devised a cover-up go home well-fed with the con- determines that person's per- window, that the longest jump by a viction that their kids are spoiled sonality. student was six feet three inches Thus Dr. Lockwood, in his to prevent our parents' discovering and he was even holding three bio- typically candid manner, once what the food in Mather is like. The chemistry textbooks which cost again refused to hedge the issue schedule for the weekend is ac- him a ridiculous eighteen dollars and has announced a hedge war- tually printed by SAGA and is New Tripod Sections apiece, two lab notebooks and a ming party at which time the devised so that the parents are Instruments Calculator. The. entire hedge will be burned down never able to taste Mather food or Exciting news,, Tripod readers. Deadlines for listing in The highest jumper cleared the hedge giving everyone and his grand- see its effect on their children. In keeping with its policy of in- Compiler are the same for An- by an easy foot and a half. Too bad mother the freedom to walk onto (The student as well profits novative journalism, the Tripod is nouncement copy, 12 noon for him, though; he landed on his the Quad without going over, un- temporarily by this deception; experimenting with several new Saturday. The Compiler is an face putting us all into hysterics as der, around or through the while his parents stay, no SAGA sections. We hope all of them will experiment - albeit a useful one- he bled to death. shrubbery. food enters, or exits, this mouth.) help bring you a little closer to the and only you the reader can make On Friday evening, students and Tripod and the Tripod a little it work. their parents are sent to the closer to the College community. Hartford Hilton for a fancy dinner. Starting next week, appearing in Because of our newest baby, we Tripod to Publish After this, SAGA resorts even the Editorial section, the Tripod is found it necessary to relocate our more to its cunning. Parents have featuring a "Cheers and Jeers" traditional Sports section. If you In acknowledgement of the fact that Open' breakfast on Saturday morning at section. What little things around will note, the Sports section now the Hilton while the students on campus have you noticed which reads forward (front to back) Period is not a vacation, The Tripod will publish: campus have to wait for brunch, you feel deserve recognition by the instead of backward (back to next Tuesday, October, 28, 1975. In i which is lunch for the parents. community-at-large. For instance. front). We are sure that all you SAGA is supposed to provide its . . "Cheers: to B&G for removing sports and jocks out there will be acknowledgement of the fact that most people; own food for this meal, but they the obscenity blocking the en-able to adapt to this strange new treat open period as a vacation, we are extending cleverly substitute edible food kept trance to Downes Arch. It was format, and after a few weeks especailly for this occasion. Any unquestionably the low spot of the we're sure you won't even notice it, our deadlines for all copy to 12 noon Sunday,! that is thrown away is taken from campus. Or perhaps ... "Jeers: to thus demonstrating again the October 26. the garbage cans in plastic bags, MBOG for: holding a lecture as a overwhelming truth of Darwin's as witnesses saw, and served as a social activity during a mid-term theory. smorgasbord for the students' week. Although the hypnotist may lunch on Wednesday/If students have been outstanding, only 100 of With this handy reader's guide, complain, they are told it's the the expected 400 students felt they we are sure that just about same meal they liked on Saturday. were able to handle another lecture everyone, if they take the time, will CREATIVITY I 1 As for supper, the schedule program." And so forth. be able to fight their way through recommends that the parents take Many of you, by the time you are the morass of" a restructured their children out. If the students reading this, have noticed that we paper. But let us once again The Trinity Review wants you I... are asked by them what they'd get have restructured the final pages remind you that the Tripod exists if they ate at Mather, they have to of the paper to make room for what for you, and to gain the most from to submit fiction, poetry, photography answer "roast beef and sundaes." we hope will become the most it, you must use it to its fullest popular and widely read section of extent. Contribute to the Compiler, The parents would assume this was the Tripod (next to the Editorials) Letters to the Editor, Column arid andartwork. a typical meal, and, not realize that The Compiler. In the Compiler you Commentary, Announcements and the sundaes consist of vanilla soup the new Cheers and Jeers. topped with some lukewarm Bbsco will find a compilation (indeed...) Send your masterpieces to box that is called hot fudge and some of all the various schedules and The Tripod is like a tax-free calendars exuded from the offices utility. Use it - it may be the last white stuff, either marshmallow or and organizations on campus. by November 3. whipped cream, but no one can tell one you get. BY OREO POTTER BViQWSE o.trortt'fi rMARS WILL NEVER PAY YOUR iftT (TOREION POWERT) rBUT MR. CAN Uf PEAS ; DER>] < ARMS DEAL BETWEEN YOO*I BLOATED, ELEPHANTINE HOME PLANET AND DER N, PRICES, U.S. VV4AS ALL ARRANGED/ BOM ER»•." • ti

} ^ ii Srvd«3 i If"-'" •wi'iii'i'i in • • iiiiflliniijiiiS^^iSl lilQ Page 6, The Trinity Tripod, October 21^1975 arts and criticism Courageous Experimentation Ovations For Dance Theatre of Harlem Now and Then, a jazz ballet in just above and just ahead, an week residency under terms of the over-amplified. Dancers and elegant tease. Both dancers audience were thus denied not only three movements choreographed Dance Touring Program of the by William Scott, a member of the exhibited courage and virtuosity in National Endowment for the Arts tonal resonation but the continuous this showcase piece of balletic resonation and calibration of troupe. Music, costumes, by Elizabeth Page and with the support of the Con- choreography and lighting acrobatics. necticut Commission on the Arts. I dancer and musician, movement Following a second intermission, For a concise chronicle of Dance and music. In criticism of the together created a vibrant Theatre of Harlem's meteoric rise attended the Friday night (October the evening's tour de force. 17) performance. troupe as a whole, their allegro "downtown" design. Gary Fails' to world-wide acceptance as a lighting design consisted of one, Dougla-the Trinidadian label for was more frenetic than brilliant. offspring of Negro and Hindu classical ballet company, I The program opened with With the noted exception of two or three vertical spears of light recommend Olga Maynard's ar- in orange, pink or white projected lovers-fused Afro rhythms, Indian Allegro Brillante, choreographed Virginia Johnson, they were Kathakali movement, Trinidadian ticle on the troupe in the May 1975 by George Balanchine, music by on a background of varying in- issue of Dance Magazine- simply not on top of the movement. folk movement and ballet into a Tschaikovsky. The program notes In a piece thematic only in tensities of blue. It was neon. It available at the library. For the was electric. It was bars and alleys single edge. The theme of purposes of this review, the described this piece as a "con- movement motifs, this is fatal. miscegenation-reflected once in company's integrity and com- centrated essay in the extended However this was just one rainy and glare and shadow. It was sex. the mixed-marriage of mitment is captured in the words classic vocabulary," Juxtaposing Friday in October with taped Quincy Jones' electric synthetic movements- was reflected again of Arthur Mitchell, company the juiciness of Tschaikovsky and Tschaikovsky and Ronald Darden kinetic boogie compelled in the relationship of Geoffrey founder and director;. the dryness of movement inspired substituting for principal, Paul movement. The dances - women in Holder's choreography, music and by an essay formalism is an in- Russel. With a more efficacious heeled shoes, fluid knee-length costumes. Holder brought a multi- After Martin Luther King was teresting idea. To be effective in assasinated, and there were all the musical solution and Paul Russell skirts in pink, orange and green, faceted perspective to each area of contrast, however, both elements to balance Ms. Johnson in the pas men in brown slacks, low-cut beige design and achieved a terrific eulogies, I asked myself: Arthur must be realized fully within their Mitchell, what can you do? When de deux (which suffered due to shirts-knew where they were and synthesis--each element you pay homage you do the thing given aesthetic parameters. Un- physical uneveness), the company why. It moved. At one particularly enlightening all others. Dancers in you do best: if you make music, fortunately there were failures in appears strong enough to be able to arresting moment, six dancers full, brilliantly red skirts exploded you beat your drum; if you are a both camps. Due to budgetary present this piece successfully. pirouetted across the stage, skirts scarlet half moons against an singer, you sing your song; if you priorities, the DTH operates circling, arms outstretched, hands azureserim.withsimplecartwheels. are a dancer, you dance. without the support of a resident After an intermission, the flexed-Iike so many turned on An insistent rhythmic phrase ballet orchestra. The company returned, metamor- tops. throbbed through the percussion The Dance Theatre of Harlem Tschaikovsky was recorded and phosized and connected in Every appeared in Hartford for a one-half The third piece offered the section-the music was live, evening's only examples of woodwinds and percussion-and characterization. Elena Carter and drove a group of nine malts dancers Paul Russell performed Karel exulting after the marriage Snook's restaged version of the pas ceremony into a gorgeous frenzy of Picasso Exhibition At Atheneum de deux from the 19th century gymnastic movement. Gary Fails ballet, Le Corsaire, based on the highlighted Holder's reds, whites, story of Lord Byron. Accordingly, greens, blacks, with projections of Hartford, Connecticut - An range in date from 1921 to 1963 and, already in the Atheneum collection huge green leaves on maroon, a according to Atheneum Director including three oils, eleven prints, Paul Russell arched and preened, exhibition of exceptional interest a lascivious satyr in headband, white cloud on blue, two white was announced last Thursday by James Elliott, "provide an and seven drawings and water- "eyes" on blue. It was irresistable animated survey of the artist's colors. The integration of the ten slashed gold trousers and gold the Wadsworth Atheneum in waist band. Elena Carter, in violet and the audience responded full Hartford, Ten paintings by Picasso middle and mature periods." Mr. Picassos from the Carey Walker force. and one painting by Juan Gris will Elliott expressed the delight of the Foundation into the Atheneum tutu and rhinestone tiara, fluttered be displayed in the museum's museum's Trustees and staff, collection will afford scholars an Gallery A107 beginning this week saying "On rare" occasions a extraordinary opportunity to study and continuing for approximately museum is able to enhance sub- the artist's development from the Wadsworth Atheneum three months. The works are the stantially its presentation of, the early 20th century to the 1960's. collection of the Ca,rey Walker work of a major artist in one fell Foundation, established by the iate swoop. This pleasure has befallen Film Dr. Herschel Carey Walker of New the museum through the paintings Final Week For Hartford, Conn. - The final week themselves. York City, and will remain at the the Carey Walker Foundation has of the current Wadsworth Following "Love Story" at 9:30 Atheneum on extended loan after placed on extended loan." Atheneum film series, "A Fine p.m. on October 22 and 24 will be the current exhibition. "Night's Dream" Romance," brings to the screen one of the spectacular Rogers and The Picassos in this collection A wide range of Picasso's styles Time is running out to see the one of the most delightful period Astaire musicals, "Roberta". Set is evident in these ten paintings: ¥ale Repertory Theatre's ac- comedies ever made. "Pride and in Paris in the frantic atmosphere naturalism, distortion, flatness claimed production of Prejudice," with Greer Garson of haute couture, th(j film affords and sculptured aspects of cubism. Shakespeare's "A Midsummer and Laurence Olivier as the Ginger Rogers and Irene Dunne Also present are some of the Night's Dream," which closes this sparring Victorian lovers, will be the chance to wear a succession of themes which most preoccupied Saturday. October 25. The closing shown at the Atheneum Theatre on gorgeous costumes. But, in any Picasso including still-life, of "The Dream" coincides with the Thursday and Saturday evenings, Rogers-Astaire film, it's the bullfighting, old master paintings, last date to subscribe to the YRT's October 23 and 25, at 9:30 p.m. and dancing that carries the day and his own image and, most im- Tenth Anniversary Season of seven at a 2:00 p.m. Saturday matinee. the production, numbers in portantly, women. Picasso was a plays. In addition to celebrating its Bosley Crowther, film critic for "Roberta" are among the most complex personality and his ap- first decade, the YRT is also the New York Times, described dazzling in all their films. proaches to these subjects vary celebrating the opening of its "Pride and Prejudice" as 'the "Roberta" was made in 1935. from the psychoanalytical and newly renovated theatre at the most deliciously pert comedy . . . On Thursday and Saturday, dispassionately objective to the corner of Chapel and York Sts., the most crisp and crackling satire October 23 and 25, at 7:30 p.m., the romantic view of a lover, with all the comforts and technical that we . . . can remember having touching, gentle love story "The facilities which the company has seen on the screen,' and named it Little Shop Around the Corner" Several works by Picasso are been doing without , these past one of the Times Ten Best of 1940. A ten cent stamp may comes to the Atheneum Theatre's years. Olivier is insufferably arrogant as screen, Ernst Lubitsch, the master be the best investment you The theatre officially opens Darcy, Garson is enchanting as will ever make in your life, of tender, romantic film-making, Friday, October 31, with the second Elizabeth Bennet, and the cast directed Margaret Sullavan and The Pallottines offer a chal- INTERNATIONAL production of the subscription includes such skilled character James Stewart in this 1940 film lenging career with deep CAREER? season, Moliere's "Don Juan," in actors as Edna May Oliver, Mary about pen pals who fall in love. personal commitments for an original version by Kenneth Boland and Edmund Gwenn. The Atheneum'^ Bicentennial the young man who is un- Cavander and directed by Robert AH McGraw and Ryan O'Neal film program, of which "A Fine selfish enough to want to Brustein, Director of the Yale play the doomed young lovers in Romance" is the first segment, lead his fellow man through Repertory Theatre and Dean of the Erich Segal's "Love Story," on will continue throughout the year the storms of religious, School of Drama. Wednesday and Friday, October 22 social and economic up- and is supported by a grant from For information about the other and 24 at 7:30 p.m. A surprisingly the National Endowment for the heaval. It's worth investi- productions and benefits of sub- gating this Catholic Com- sentimental film for 1970, "Love Arts. Tickets for the films are scribing, call the YRT Box Office Story" was immensely popular, available at the Atheneum Theatre munity of Apostolic Men. A representative (203) 436-1600 and ask for a free Make the investment. It will be ton the campus' ' although perhaps more with the box office prior to each per- may be the beginning of a brochure. There is only one week parents of contemporary college formance. great career. ' WEDNESDAY left to subscribe. students than with the students NOVEMBER 5, 1975 to discuss qualifications for USED BOOK SAU PALLOTTINES; advanced study at SHOWCASE CINEMAf 1234 AMERICAN 1-84EXIT58-SILVER LANE-ROBERTS ST. October 27 - November 1 , Director of Vocations ! [The Society of the Catholic Apostolate! GRADUATE SCHOOL EAST HARTFORD • 24 HR. TEL. INFO. 568-8810 10 AM - 9:30 PM daily 1 P.O. Box 32 and job opportunities bw* FREE LIGHTED PARSING« We Honor MASTER CHARGEj. WESTFARMS MALL — Cotllngswood, N.J. 08108 in the field of INSIDE NEAR THE I .. [I Please send me information! INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT STAGE [ about the Pallottine Q Priest-j| OVER 15,000 BOOKS AT hood Q Brotherhood BARGAIN PRICES i Interviews may be scheduled at m •v'PCf-. Textbooks, Classics, Name ' OFFICE OF CAREER Novels and many others Address Records and Sheet music COUNSELING too! City State Zip 1 WINNER OF Free Admission. . 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! i Phone No. Sponsored by: AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL Greater Hartford Chapter OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT CAMEI [Grade Thunderbird Campus Brandeis Glendale, Arizona 85306 L ... Women's Committee October 21, 1975, The Trinity Tripod, Page 7 I

The Filler Memorandum

by Jon Landau simply no need for "Lyin' Eyes," & lack of freedom to make it all "...We've always wanted every source of sales ; and of filler. are albums on which the artists song to be the best that could be. Spector pioneered again by never sound like they are doing an excellent, straight narrative cotmt. Now most musicians have We didn't want any filler. No refusing to produce the albums less than their best, that nothing is about adultery, to run on for six- that freedom but don't have that stinkers." That's how Eagle Glenn named after his hits, .such as the there to merely fill out the record. and-a-half minutes. The title song, much to say. But because they Frey recently summed up his Righteous Brothers' You've Lost My list of such records would in- good as it is, would have been need to release albums on a attitude toward the seldom That Lovin' Feelin'. The Beach clude such nearly perfect albums better if it had been more concise. regular basis, they're forced to put discussed musical fact of Boys took a different tack, as the Byrds' Mr. r Tambourine And although Beraie Leadon is a out work that's less than their best. Man, Otis Redding's Dictionary of fine instrumentalist, his "Journey life-filler. recording countless instrumentals For every Elton John who comes that consited of nothing more than Soul, The Band, Neil Young's After of the Sorcerer," the album's Padding records is a part of the longest track, is not only boring but close to making each moment rock tradition and not a a few chord changes, endlessly the Goldrush, Jerry Butler's Ice on Ice and Joni Mitchell's Blue. takes the space of what would have count, there are ten Average White necessarily bad one. It began in the repeated. They later innovated by Bands who simply can't come up including three-minute con- Among more recent albums, the ideally been two more first-rate Fifties with the unavoidable fact melodic Eagles songs. with a legitimate album's worth of that a single record has two sides, versations among the band best-selling album in the country as I write this, the Jefferson material every nine months and a one for the hit and one for members on such topics as how In the mid-Sixties, the most Barry White who doesn't even try. something else. Producers used to they make records. (On a few Starship's Red Octopus, more than talented musicians complained of spend most of the limited time they transitional albums they made use meets the criteria. (courtesy of Rolling Stone) had in the studio working on the hit of both techniques.) But it is also true that something and left only a few minutes at the The British concept of filler was bizarre happened to the filler end for coming up with something closer to that of Little Richard and concept, coinciding with the rise of to fill out the record. They really Jerry Lee Lewis. They used the the album: Ifc changed its form and did not want anything too com- space to show sides to their per- became pretentious. The easiest Rock Review mercial for fear that the disc sonality that didn't come through way to conserve artistic energy is jockeys, whose intelligence they in the hits. They simply recorded by recording fewer songs. And sure by Philip Bradford When I first heard this album it never overrated, might mistakenly their versions of old rock songs enough, where the average album FLEETWOOD MAC fooled me. George Martin is the play it instead of the hit. that were part of their club had 12 songs in 1965 and ten in 1970, By PHILIP BRADFORD producer and he has once again the day when the eight-song album come up with a lush, full, finely Because the recording of the flip repertoire. The Stones made one On their last few albums classic LP after another, becomes standard isn't far off. Fleetwood Mac barely stayed crafted sound. On repeated side was by its nature a loose, listening however, I realized that hurried affair, some musicians dominated by their extraordinary Any musician will tell you that it afloat; buoyed only by the cover versions of Chess blues, Stax is easier to record one long cut then songwriting talents of Christine this new L.P. by Jeff Beck is totally used it as an outlet to reveal lacking in depth and originality. aspects of their musical per- R&B and their original songs conceive of and execute two McVie. Her songs were oasis in a' written in those grooves. shorter ones. And it's easier to kill desert of truly mediocre material. Blow by Blow is an insult to my sonality that could never come intelligence as well as Jeff Beck's. through on the hit. Jerry Lee Lewis The Stones weren't the only ones the lock and accumulate the The Mac's latest L.P., Fleetwood necessary 35 to 45 minutes by Mac, however, is consistently good The formula is simple-take some recorded great versions of country who could transform filler into simple tunes, add a smooth bass- songs and Little Richard put down interesting records. padding individual songs, through because of the addition of Stevie extra long solos, long fade-outs or Nicks, an excellent songwriter. heavy disco sound and let Jeff frenzied shuffles. used padding to balance their Beck play solo guitar. albums—it provided them with the unnecessary repetitions than to Her songs "Landslide" and But more often, the producer write additional first-rate "Rhiannon" are near classics, and The result is a very boring wouldn't let the musician give the uptempo screamers they were unable to write for themselves. material. her vocals are warm and full- album. The songs are all in- listener that much. The Penguins bodied. strumentals, which isn't bad, put a lengendary 58 seconds of fluff And Dylan, who recorded lots of Black record makers can justify filler, always gave it an original their tendency to use fewer songs As usual, Christine McVie except that they are lengthened to on the other side of "Earth Angel." the point of tedium. The disco beat The Jaynetts* producers backed twist; he wrote one of the great through the disco fad, which contributed some Mac Songs par novelty numbers, the Top Ten demands longer cuts for dancing excellence; they are melodic and never varies; nearly the whole "Sally, Go 'Round the Roses" with album is played to the same time a copy of the track minus the vocal. "Rainy Day Women #12 and 35." purposes. But Gamble and Huff smooth as well as having beat and Thorn Bell's long fade-outs on which seems to propel them for- and beat. Jeff Beck is a good And Phil Spector, who would go to By "the mid-Sixties, the album guitarist, but he seems reluctant, any length to make sure nothing was both the most important unit . many songs on their recent; albums ward .effortlessly. Perhaps (6 • Jays, Spinners) hurt the quality Fleetwood Mac should be an all on Blow by Blow, to really let loose competed with the hit side, backed of sales and of art. Musician and or experiment. his A sides with instrumentals audience had stopped thinking of it of the body of the songs. ,. ' ' female band, for this album's named after - as, in Keith Richard's lovely turn The Eagles don't fare much appeal stems mostly from Stevie If you play this record during a s—such as "Nino and Sonny (Big of the phrase, "a hit single and ten better on One of These Nights. • Nicks and Christine McVie. Who party people can dance to it, but in tracks of shit." Despite Glenn Frey's good in- said women can't make great the end, Blow by Blow is so min- Trouble)" named for Nino Tempo music? and Sonny Bono. Through the years there have tentions, this is an album that most dless it hardly works, even on that reviewers, as well as the listeners Jeff Beck - Blow by Blow level. As albums became more popular been a handful of records that showed respect for the nation that I've talked to, believe was hurt by during the early Sixties, they an excess of filler. There was replaced singles as the primary the LP is a complete work. These 4th Hilarious Week WE DELIVER TO ALL DORMS PITTA GOURMET

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SEE THE MOST RIDICULOUS CAST OF CHARACTERS hru THURS, 11 AM* - M- A.M. EVER ASSEMBLED. YOU'LL HOWL AT THE ANTICS OF: ?»!. & SAT, 11 A.M. - i A.M. • "HARRY THE SEX MANIAC" • "USCHI BAZZOOM" "IMS ST AGAIN MATIUSA" « "SUSIE SUPER FAN" ".. SUN. 1* A.IVL. - I® P.M. ••••••:•. "OMAR, WORLD'S GREATEST LOVER" # "MORRIS, THE PUSH? PEDDLES" "THE SWANBE RIVER KID" « "SCOTTY THE SHEEPHERDER" B1FORE•'• YOU 1IAYE YOUR HOME ...AND EIGHTY MORE CRAZIES WHO WILL KEEP YOU —-— CALL .IN YOUR ORDER IN SmCHES FROM BEGINNING TO END! WE 2:15 -7:45 - '9:45; • ; 527-7380 DELIVER Page 8, The Trinity Tripod, October 21, 1975 ftsr&'j problems ana needs ot community, geographical distribution of ability, nriiciilali'iiess llonm ol Malhcr Cfimjui!; Onlpr ine do action research, and take part practicing M.D.'s in productivity in a small, dedicated beginning at ll:(X) a.m. The deadline for finishing in staff strategy sessions. Six- Massachusetts, etc., and to edit or group. $l00/week (negotiable), courses graded Incomplete last month placement minimum, long re-write manuscripts on similar minimum 6 months (12 months spring or earlier, and for dropping hours (60 hour week), bilingual subjects. $100-$120/week, preferred), 37 1/2 hour week. Must D.C, Term courses one is presently enrolled in students (Spanish especially) depending on skill and hours. Forty fill by November 1; this op- is Friday, Nov. 7, 1975. If In- welcome. Probable placement in hour week, minimum 3 months, portunity especially for a minority Students may obtain an- completes are not finished by then, Providence, Rhode Island, but possibly longer. student. plications from the Office of such grades will automatically be may be placed elsewhere. One Assistant to Program Educational Services to apply to changed to F's. Christmas Term Reasonable subsistence received Coordinator needed in Boston to Venture Program one of the several programs run by 1975 courses may not be dropped by student as part of job training in work in cultural alliance using The American University after Nov. 7th but must be graded. practice, strategy of community membership resources (mime Dr. Donald Allen, Director of (Washington Semester, Foreign organization. troupes, museums, concert Foreign Programs for the College Policy Semester, Urban Affairs Internship Two editorial-research groups) to help promote racial Venture Program, will be at Semester, etc.). Apply by October assistants needed in Boston to integration in Boston schools. Trinity on Thursday, 23 October 31, 1975 for Trinity term 1976 Three or more community perform statistical tallies, Applicant must have experience 1975, to discuss placement op- organizers needed to perform meaningful summaries from with curriculum, commitment to portunities abroad. He will have a street organizing, identify printout sheets on such projects as school desegregation, good writing general meeting in the Committee

Missoula, Montana; and in New states in the United States and BikecentenniaS England from April 10 through 16, Volunteers Hosts Needed Latin America. "We in Con- Bikecentennial is seeking 1400 1976. Cost, including food, lodging, necticut," he said, "have Paraiba leaders to run the inaugural tours instruction, books and materials, is Can you volunteer a few hours a The Connecticut Partners of the in Brazil's Northeast as a sister in 1976 of the first Trans-America $75,00. week to assist at an indoor Americas is seeking families in the state. For over ten years now, we Bicycle Trail. Leaders will receive recreation oroRram? The Dutch have maintained an on-going BIKECENTENNIAL, a non- Point Housing Development, state to host 150 visiting Brazilians food, lodging, and normal tour profit, charitable organization, is expected to arrive at Bradley exchange of professional volun- services as well as a small daily located within approximately ten teers in the areas of the arts, sponsoring the tours varying in blocks of the campus, has an in- Airport on November 23rd for a expense allowance, all part of an length from 12 to 82 days, covering five day Connecticut visit. agriculture, business, education, adventure of a lifetime. door recreation program each medicine and sports. Connecticut up to 4,500 miles of America's most Tuesday, Wednesday and Thur- According to Dr. Richard Over 50 courses will be offered at historic and scenic regions. The Quintiliani, Chairman of the families have hosted Paraiban four major training centers in sday from 3 to 9 p.m. Volunteers students who have come to the establishment of the Trail marks are needed to help with the Connecticut Partners, "The Oregon, Colorado, the MidWest the beginning of a long term Connecticut Partners is a member United States for either studies or and the MidAtlantic regions. The supervision of the activities in the home stays." commitment by Bikecentennial to program. If interested please of the National Association of the seven-day sessions include develop a network of long distance Partners of the Americas, a non- classroom and field instruction in contact Mr. Miguel It. Zayas, bicycle trails criss-crossing the Manager at Dutch Point Colony, profit organization which is an off- Anyone interested in hosting a bicycling technique, safety, repair, U.S. shoot of the Alliance for Progress Brazilian couple during the group dynamics, touring and 127 Wyllys Street, Hartford, Conn. started in the early 1960's." For further details on Leader- 06106 or telephone 522-5440. November visit should contact special bike and camping skills ship Training Courses and an Quintiliani explained that there Mrs. Alice Stanley Young, 21 and first aid. In addition to the application write: BIKECEN- are now over 40 partnerships Wintergreen Lane, .West Hartford, training centers, courses will be TENNIAL '76, P.O. Box 1034, Barbieri Center functioning between different Connecticut. held at Pt. Reyes, N. California; Missoula, Mt. 59801. Applications for study in Rome on Trinity's program next term are due in the Office of Educational Sarasin Speaks on Services by Monday, Oct. 27, 1975. American Political System Craft Fair by Livia DeFUippis The Exchange, a retail shopping D and office complex in Fa^mington, Congressman Ronald Sarisan of Congress. "The failure of members of Congress, because will host over 100 craftsmen and (R—Conn) spoke to a small Congress today is the failure of the they have little chance to get back small merchants during the gathering in Alumni Lounge committee system." He added, home and defend their votes, take weekend of November 28, 29 & 30 in Wednesday morning, Oct. 15. "Congress is not planning ahead, the popular, not the right way." an open market sale to the public. He was invited to speak by we just react." Sarisan spoke of the fuel Craftsmen represented will in- Professor Clyde McKee's Fresh- He also discussed the lack of problem, the possibility of federal clude silver, copper, brass, pot- man Seminar, "Politics and Oral communication between 'the aid to New York City, and the tery, leather, macrame, jewelry Communication". The audience elected officials and their con- abolishment of the party lever in and a wide variety of artistic I consisted of Trinity students and stituents. He said that "Congress is voting booths. creations. The three day event will Connecticut politicians. designed to be a deliberative and In support of President Ford's be highlighted by performances of Sarisan's opening remarks dealt study group. The hard decisions remarks in Hartford on Tuesday international folk dancing and 12 with the problems in the structure are to be made by Congress, and night, Sarisan emphasized that, free shows by the world-famous "we have to slow down the rate of Heiken Puppets. Local fiddlers Bill growth of the federal govern- Walach and Will Welling will en- Considering ment." "We are as broke, tertain with their popular brand of bankrupt, and derelict as the city spontaneous country music. N of New York. The only difference is The festival runs Friday, that we can print our way out of November 28 and Saturday, Graduate School? it," he continued. November 29 from 10:00 A.M. to In response to a Trinity student's 9:00 P.M. and Sunday, November Consider the faculty, concern regarding the increasing 30 from 10:00 A.M. until 6:00 P.M. absence of a two party system in research facilities, Hartford, Sarisan said, "For some Reviewer reason, it isn't fashionable to be Republican." He added that he has The TRIPOD is looking for students and programs of the never been ashamed of his af- students to review records, books, N filiation, and informed his and movies for future issues. audience that the only two black Reviewers get to keep books that Senators and the first twelve black they review. For more information Graduate School Congressmen were Republican. contact the TRIPOD office in He further admonished the Seabury. Democrats, charging that their of Arts and Science party "will promise anything Government without worrying about delivery." In answer to a question on Ford's Prof. McKee will sponsor an of New York University; chances of re-election, Sarisan Intensive Study Program on state E characterized the President as a and local government next term. "truly honest and nice individual." The program will be in Hartford and the unmatched cultural and He predicted that the American and will include a research in- public would support Ford because ternship under the auspices of a research facilities of New York City "they want to know they have State of Connecticut legislator. someone in the Oval Office they Seniors and juniors are given Un ve r i f sity counselor wiU.be on the Trinity don't have to keep an eye on." He preference for the 15 places in the added that this trust would be program. Obtain additional in- well placed," saying that the formation and an application from Councehng Office in Seabury. opinion that Ford "is not too swift" Prof. McKee in McCook 322-324A. R is discredited by his long in- The application deadline is volvement with Congress. Wednesday, October 22. AT PHIL'S & up I Octobcr21^975J^The_ IYinitj- Tripod, Page 9

Since one-fourth of humanity ference on Hunger, 11 Dupont Hunger goes to bed hungry alleviation of Circle #900, Washington, D.C. Arthritis "Falling into the hands of a hunger is one of the greatest moral 20036, Telephone: (202) 797-6455. quack always harms the arthritis Conference and social concerns of the day. patient," warns Dr. Kenney. Hundreds of concerned Scores of colleges - large and Awareness Day "If you have arthritis and accept "Sometimes the product itself is university persons ~ faculty, small, public and private - are The Central Connecticut Chapter the advice of a quack, you're not in dangerous to health as are some of students, administrators, and sending representatives to Austin of the National Organization for for any Halloween treat," warned the drugs offered in Mexican college chaplains - are meeting eager to explore the role of higher Dr. James D. Kenney, President of clinics." education in combating hunger^ Women and the Hartford Region this November 21-23 at the YWCA will co-sponsor WOMEN'S the Connecticut Chapter of The Yet even if the product causes no University of Texas in Austin to AWARENESS DAY in conjunction Arthritis Foundation. "The damage, the very fact that reliance respond to a call for action. Some of the fifty resource with the national women's strike tricksters who peddle phoney on quackery prevents the patient "Participants at the Conference panelist who are preparing to arthritis remedies lure victims from seeking proper medical care exchange, ideas on programs to called by NOW. The program will will examine the components of a be held on Wednesday, October away from competent care and rob enables the disease to progress out national food policy which is at alleviate hunger are: William them of millions of dollars." of control and possibly cause Sloan Coffin, Chaplain of Yale 29th, from 11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M. once comprehensive and in the Soromundi Room of the Frauds and rackets robbed permanent damage. responsible", said Clark Fisher, a . University, Frances Moore Lappe, arthritis victims of over $400 Dr. Kenney said that early author of Diet for a Small Planet Hartford Region YWCA, 135 Broad Conference Coordinator. Small Street, Hartford. million last year alone, he diagnosis and prompt treatment by groups - called Regional Task and co-founder of the Institute for reported. Much of this money was a qualified physician can usually Food and Development Policy, Keynote speakers discussing Forces - will pool resources and topics pertinent to women today spent by victims of rheumatoid prevent crippling, and emphasized draft reports, which will enable Michael Jacobson, founder of Food arthritis, the worst form of thethat research to find a real cure for Day and editor of Food fpr People have been scheduled from 12:00 to delegates to design programs and 1:00 P.M. Also featured are music, disease. While long-term medical the disease is underway. Not for Profit, Dennis Wood, from treatment can control the pain and to take informed action upon the Office of the Undersecretary poetry, and drama concerning In an attempt to prevent this returning to their campuses. There issues essential to women. Booths help prevent the crippling of waste of valuable time and money, is no fee to attend the conference. for Economic Affairs at the State rheumatoid arthritis, scientists The Arthritis Foundation has made Department, and Glenn Tussey, staffed by representatives of have not found a cure. According to Fisher, "Topics to acting administrator of PL 480 several feminist organizations will available a brochure which be discussed will range from programs at the Department of be available for dissemination of Dr. Kenney, who lectures at provides special information on personal involvement to com- Agriculture. For more information literature and information. Yale-University, said arthritis is how to spot such deception. Free munity action and include: the and a copy of the Hunger Con- Child care will be provided at the made to order for quacks because copies of "Arthritis Quackery" are ecology of malnutrition, the right ference brochure please contact: YWCA for a small fee and coffee it is a chronic disease, one which available from the Connecticut to food, food assistance and has painful symptoms that can Chapter of the organization at 964 The National University Con- will be served. For further in- Asylum Avenue, Hartford, Ct., reserve policies, and research and formation call 525-1163. come and go, and one for which curriculum development." there is not cure. 06105. More Announcements '33,500,-000. Tutors Needed Tickets Unclaimed Recital Many youthful offenders bet- Mather Hall Board of Governors ween the ages of 16 and 18 need present, in concert, Roger McGuin, Josephine Graziano, soprano, $eliola:rsliips support through friendship and formerly of the Byrds, on will give a recital Sat., Nov. 8 at Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and tutoring. Are you interested in November 21. Tickets go on sale 8:15 pm at John Wallace Middle fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of helping another young person this October 27. Watch for further School, Halleran Dr., Newington. these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975. way? The social service coor- details. For ticket information call 278- dinator for the Youthful Offenders 2073. ./••• UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS Court of the Court of Common 11275 Massachusetts Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90025 Pleas is a Trinity graduate, Amy Golbert, who will help you make • I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling. contact with a youthful offender. Your support through tutoring or HARTFOKD BICYCLE SHOP N |j friendship will be appreciated. PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF For more information call Amy Expert Bicycle & Wheel Repair UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO: Golbert in the Public Defender's SPECIALIZING IN 10 SPEED Office of the Court of Common Skates Sharpened—Firewood Pleas, #522-8181. Nam e Address. 10% off on parts—Trinity Students with I.D.'s City __ ' State_ _Zip_ 54 Barnard St. (California residents please add 6% sales tax.) I Hrs. 10:30-6 pm Mon-Sat. (across from Bess Eaton's)

289 New Britain Ave. L (next to ABC Pizza AT PHIL'S. Tues., Oct. 21st Show Someone You Care) U Flowers Sent Worldwide Sandpaintings —10% off w/ad Bob Paskowitz - Sax Master Charge v Phone 522-6686 Andy Bassford - Guitar FBI. - OCX 24th JV 9p.m.. 11:3®P.M. .. N 4-6 P.M. (Trinity's Own): : EAT CALL WHEN Peggy DELICIOUS YOU LEAVE PIZZA PIES YOUR HOME AND IT WILL BE Tredrichson HOT OVEN READY UPON C ©HINDERS ARRIVAL Country Blues I Mk Singer RICHARD STARON, PHONE Will Appear For Your Listening Pleasure Prop. 2474234 ACROSS FROM TRINITY COUiGE H M PHII'8 (Over The Rocks) 217 NEW BRITAIN AVE. • HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT C 11 A.M.- AT PHIL'S 99 * up 2 P.M. i'age 19. Thr Trinity Tripoli, October ::i,

Trinity Blanks Colby 17-0

the Colby 24 and darted untouched viously pleased by the win, cited a "It was a great team effort," he by Wayne N. Cooke The second half, although number of factors as key to the adds. "I was especially pleased remaining basically the same as . into the endzone for the score. The Trinity College football team Again Maus' kick accompanied the victory: "One of the things that with the team's attitude at half- regained its winning ways this past the first, did nevertheless alter in was definitely important was the time. The kids felt sure we would its productivity of miscues and tally, thereby accounting for the Saturday with a convincing 17-0 final 17-0 score. fact that turnovers by the offense win and displayed great con- victory over Colby at rain- subsequently of points. Electing to were kept minimal, even as bad as fidence." drenched Jessee Field. Playing kick off rather than receive on The remaining time, as did most conditions were. We remained under monsoon-like conditions on a their option, Trinity's strategy of the game, featured the play of effective also because we drove at Unlike everything else at the field blotted with large pools of immediately paid off as a Don Trinity's defense. During the final key times and the defense played game, that was apparently one water, the Bantams utilized an Grabowski recovery of a Mule ten minutes, the Bantam line, very well. thing that could not be dampened. impenetrable defensive attack and vfumble sex up the first Bantam headed by Leverone, Zabel, and second half explosion by the of- score. On a fourth down and two Grabowski sacked the quarterback fense to secure their second win of situation Maus was called in to a total of five times, accounted for the year, thus bringing their record split the uprights from the Colby 14 four fumbles (with a litUe help Win Boosts Frosh to 2-1-1. ; yd. line and thereby gave Trinity a from the rain), and nullified any As could be expected, both teams 3-0 lead with three minutes gone in effort at sustaining a drive that the were hindred by the adverse the period. Mules attempted. Similarly, to 2-1 conditions in the game, however, it throughout the game, the Trinity On the next series of downs, secondary, led by Wiggen and was not until the third quarter that although unable to sustain any sort by Andrew Walsh down pass, After having its con- the resulting mistakes started junior cornerback Dave Jancarski, of drive, Colby nevertheless accompanied the effectiveness of Trinity's freshman football team version attempt blocked, Trinity presenting themselves on the retained possession on a led 13-0. Scoreboard. In the first half, the line to create the solid, well- registered a 21-0 shutout victory questionable roughing the kicker balanced, unit that in four games over Springfield, Friday October The Bantam defense, mashalled Trinity marched within their op- penalty. With a first and ten at the ponent's 25 yd. line on two oc- has yielded only 30 points. 17, at Springfield. The victory by linebacker Joe Delano, Trinity 36 and Colby in command, Additionally, the play of the boosted the frosh's record to 2-1. dominated the Springfield offense casions but unfortunately were however, middle guard Mike holding it to a meager 8 first downs unable to sgpre on both. An un- Leverone, replacing injured offensive line was a great factor in The Batam's dominated all successful 43 yard field goal at- the Bantam win. Enabling Trinity aspects of the game, amassing 338 and regularly forcing it to punt regular Vic Novak, recovered the from poor field position. tempt by Mike Maus and a Bantam first of his four fumble recoveries to control the ball for the majority yards in total offence while fumble on; Colby's 21 concluded of the game by maintaining an limiting the Springfield Chiefs to Trinity's offense staged another each drive, respectively. in the second half, and thereby effective ground attack, the 68, scoring three touchdowns and long drive that was halted inside ended the ensuing Mule threat. veteran threesome of John Con- missing four other opportunities the Springfield 10 by a holding Highlighting the Trinity offense After a change of possessions penalty and the expiration of the in the first half was the outstanding nelly, Tony LaPolla, and LaPlante within the Chief 15 yard line, and and another Leverone recovery, were largely responsible for being forced to punt only twice. first half. After the half the Batams running of sophomore halfback Trinity was forced to punt again commanded the field, Mike Brennan, who along with following an unsuccessful series of opening gaping holes on numerous The frosh eleven's offense, led by occasions to aid in the back's ef- quarterback Mike Foy, opened the producing three long drives, in- running mate John Wholley was downs ending at their own 33. On cluding one more touchdown effort called upon to anchor the Bantam' the first play from scrimmage, forts. Outstanding blocking by game with a 68 yard drive, ground game. Due to an un- sophomore tight-end Marc Montini highlighted by tight end Bruce set up bya 22 yard-run by Rowland however, the White Mules, having and several shorter jaunts by fortunate and hopefully short-lived to work out of a large water-filled also contributed formidably to the Shea's 31 yard pass reception, that injury to leading rusher Pat Bantam cause. stalled on the Springfield 3 yard Votze and Rowland. Quarterback area, again fumbled, and this time Foy then ran in the touchdown Heffeman early in the game, junior tackle Gary Zabel was there Statistically, although Colby held line because of Trinity fumbles. Brennan was forced to run more slight advantages in total yards, The Chiefs then mounted their from the 1 yard line. An attempt at to cradle it in. Although now a two point conversion failed when than usual, but nevertheless receiving the ball in the quagmire passing, and first downs, the sole threatening drive of the game, capably answered with 46 yards on remaining honors easily went to pushing the Bantams back into Foy's toss slipped through themselves, this did in fact set up Rowland's fingers. eleven carries. the first Bantam touchdown. Two Trinity. Brennan, the leading their own territory before the Colby's efforts in the first two plays later, halfback Tony Cic- rusher for both teams, amassed a Trinity defense solidified and The Bantam defense continued stanzas proved similar to Trinity's caglione came off a pair of key total of 64 yds. in 18 carries. stymied Springfield. its mastery of the Springfield of- and likewise met with equally blocks by linemen Gerry LaPlante Wholley and Ciccaglione followed Trinity then mounted another fense, locking up a shut-out and unproductive ends. A sixty-seven and Dave Poulin and ran it in with 33 yds. on 11 attempts and 9 drive, mixing hard running by scoring Trinity's last points on a yd. pass play, coming off a missed untouched from the six. Maus yds. on two attempts, respectively. backs Paul Votze and John Flynn, fourth quarter safety. defensive assignment, put the followed with the successful In passing, co-captain George Rose the day's leading ground gainer The frosh fell to St.' Thomas More White Mules in scoring position on conversion making the score 10-0 completed three of nine attempts with 79 yards, and Foy passes. The 21-12 on October 10 at Jesse Field the Bantam 12 yard line but three with 14:57 remaining to play. for 28 yds. with the longest coming drive culminated in Trinity's, first after pounding Williams 20-14 in its plays later a missed field goal on an outstanding 24 yd. grab by touchdown on a 1 yard plunge by first game October 4, in a game negated any chance of a score. A little over two minutes later, Brennan. Maus continued his usual fullback John Rowland. also played at Trinity. The Ban- Colby threatened again, however, following back to back fumble excellence in kicking, averaging 43 Springfield was then victimized ay tams will travel to face Western early in the second quarter, but an recoveries, Trinity's coming from yds. on six punts and accounting an -interception by Bantam Connecticut on Monday October 27 interception and fine runback by (you guessed it) Leverone, junior for five points; on a field goal and defensive back William Irving. and will return home to close out senior safety John Wiggin on his safety Tony Trivella, replacing two conversions. Foy connected with split end Bill the season against Amherst on own ten yard line halted the 54 yd. injured starter Steve Thoren, in- Bantam Coach Don Miller, ob- McCandless for a 39 yard touch- November 7. Mule team drive. tercepted a strav Mule aerial on Field Hockey Splits to Smith, Wesleyan

by Tina Poole The varsity won their game 2-0 with goals scored by Tina Poole and Thanks to the men who rolled the Carter Wurtz. The offense and field every day last week, the field defense played their best that day hockey team played two games and Karen Blakeslee, goalie, without letting the mud and rain complained because she only saw get to them - too much. The first the ball twice during the game. The game against Smith resulted in a junior varsity having, un- lose for varsity and a win for the fortunately, a number of accidents, junior varsity. The varsity game came through with a victory. The was well played by both teams but score became 2-1 when Beth only Ann Jones was able to score Bonbright and Cilia Williams (both and for that she got a faceful of right halfbacks) scored goals. mud. The final score was for 4-1 for With open period coming up, the Smith. field hockey team has a break but will play at HOME vs. Williams, a The junior varsity game proved rescheduled game on the 29th of a bit brighter with a tie of 1-1 by a, October. Thanks to the fans, and a goal from Beth Bonbright; con- word to the men who have sidering the condition the varsity challenged us for after season left the field, the junior varsity games, WE DON'T MESS played a good game. AROUND, HEY! The second match was against Wesleyan. It was a good day all around for the Bantamettes. RESEARCH PAPERS Olivia Brown passes through Wesleyan defense. Brancroft & Garcia THOUSANDS ON FILE Sender your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of SQUASH RACKETS 5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling. «f$95 COLLEGIATE RESEARCH 1720 PONTIUS AVE, SUITE 201 LOS ANGELES, CALIF.90025 -and up OPEN Sat. Name. Jia.rn.-i2 p.m. 297 1/2 Weekdays & | COLLEGE SPORT SHOP Address Washington St. 12 a.m.-ti p.m. sun. (Across from Hifd. 112 New Britain Avenue City ( 3 min. from campus) 247-W05 GRINDERS PIZZAS FOR FASTSERvrce October 21, 1975, The Trinity Tripod, Page 11

Soccer Splashers to Tuft's Tie conditions, offensive play broke Things were going fairly well for past the sidelines resulted in ex- defensemen to get a clear shot on tremely close caDs. Carley. Clay had very little chance down into mud-splashing, and the by Ira Goldman the visitors during much of the first game ended 2-2. half, as the Bants were able to For his part, Trin goalie Clay to get the shot and the game was A famous rock guitarist named Carley was doing his best in rather tied for good at 2-2. Hopefully, the weather will Eric Clapton once wrote a song control play at mid-field and keep prove to be somewhat more the ball in Tuft's end. The host's difficult conditions. Clay came up The Bantams seemed to entitled, "Let it Rain," and after with several difficult saves, but dominate the rest of the second hospitable to the Bants tomorrow goalie was kept quite busy by the at BenOy. If not, the already last Saturday's attempted game at Bantams, as he came up with seemed to hurt himself at other half, but it proved to be an almost Tufts, the Trinity soccer team is times by gambling and rushing out impossible task to score, as the waterlogged Trinity crew will several spectacular saves to keep certainly not be surprised, as the seriously considering it as their the game scoreless. Trinity of the net trying to prevent scoring pond that once protected the official slogan. For the second chances. This resulted in Clay's Trinity goal now belonged to rainy weather continues to haunt seemed to have decent success in New England. weekend in a row, the Trinity bringing the ball down the wings, being trapped outside the goal area Tuft's. With the ever worsening booters found themselves at the as the field was in somewhat better on several occasions, but due to mercy of Mother Nature, who condition along the sides. Zan some heads - up defensive work again preferred a swim meet to a Harvey had several good blasts and the sheer ineptness of the Tufts soccer game. After the ebacle was from his left wing spot, just offense, the hosts were held finished, the Bantams found missing scores on several oc- scoreless. themselves tied 2-2 by an inferior casions. Unfortunately, the Bants On the whole,. the Bantam Tufts squad. seemed to enjoy standing in defense made a respectable puddles and kicking mud, and the showing for itself. Especially The Bantam booters now find wing threats were few and far outstanding was the play of Co- their season's record (after wiping between. On too many occasions, captain Jim Solomon, who seemed several layers of mud off their possible scoring threats were to be all over the field. Solomon faces) at 1-3-2. The Bants travel to stifled by Bants who insisted in was able to effectively use his Bentley tomorrow for a 3:30 trying to dribble the ball up the speed on the wet turf to run back contest. mud-strewn center of the field. and cutoff Tuft's breakaways. Trinity was finally able to break Once again, playing conditions the ice and hit the Scoreboard at were deplorable, to say the least. On the few times that Tufts the22:00 mark of the first half. The The Tufts field was quite saturated managed to free the ball from their Bants were set up for a corner-kick by rains that had been falling own end, they managed to put good from the left side, and Zan Harvey throughout the previous night, and pressure on the Trinity goal (?). lofted the kick across . the goal continued to fall in ever increasing Their main problem in scoring was mouth untouched to an eagerly amounts during the game. Large the necessity of picking up the ball waiting Tom Lenahan, who easily puddles dotted the entire field, and and throwing over the small pond booted it in to the far corner from the Trinity goalmouth during the into the Trinity goal. Seeing that about 7 yards out. Thus, the score firsthalf could have easily been this is not allowed in soccer rules, at halftime was 1-0, Trinity. mistaken for the mouth of the Tufts remained unable to score Mississippi River. It was im- throughout the first half. Shortly after the start of the possible for either team to sustain second half, Tuft's was able to a short passing game, as the At some points, it seemed that break through the Trin defense to puddles effectively cut short any the Trinity defense had left the knot the score. A medium range passes rolling along the ground. field and let the pond take care of shot from amongst a number of The long passing attack was also the Tuft's offense. At other times, Trinity defensemen eluded hurt by the large expanses of mud it seemed that the Trin defense was Carley's hands as he attempted to that developed as the game wore doing its level best to keep the ball stop the shot. on. All in all, Aaron Thomas' poetic in the center of the field and Trinity really came alive after words summed things up-" These prolong Tuft's scoring op- the hosts goal, and the visitors are the worst conditions I've ever portunities. Several times, quickly retaliated to regain the played in"- so go the words of a Trinity's failure to boot the ball lead, 2-1. Duffy Shea, who_was soccer authority! over the water obstacles or simply later to leave the contest due to an .injury, lofted, a,^beautiful corner shot to the left side of the host's photo by Steve Roberts goal just as Zan Harvey came Women's Crew charging in from his left wing Muffy Rogers takes singles crown 6-1, 6-1 over UConn's position. Harvey immediately Margy Scriven. booted an extremely hard shot into Wins Goodwin Cup the far side of the goal. by Nancy Nies The lead was rather short-lived however, as Tuft's left wing snuck On Saturday, Oct. 11th, the Dartmouth, Connecticut College, around behind several Trinity Your hair is important, so trust it only to the best. Trinity Women's Crews raced to U.Mass. and Holy Cross. victory over Kent School, winning TRINITY BARBER SHOP the Genevieve H. Goodwin Cup for the second consecutive year. 209 Zion Street Undaunted by the pouring rain, SUMMIT HILL Trinity's second varsity boat set expert hair shaping & regular haircuts the pace, winning by a length and a 455 Zion Special . . . reg. haircuts $3.00 half with a time of 7:36 over Kent's "Down The Hill From Trinity. 7:42. Cheered on by Trinity's men's 246-2143 crews a,nd a large audience of Need We Say More?" parents, women's varsity con- fidently moved ahead on the mile Phil & Jerry, Permittees THf KING0i HIS LOYAL SHORT SUBJECTS and a half course, overtaking Kent ^x ^B A M BIM KKTS GODZILLA ••'• ^^W^^Cy by a length and a half to secure the : ; Cup with a winning time of 6:58 second foi second thefunniest short ever made' 7 "'A ^/-'THANK; YOU,:IV1ASK:MAN':;::;VV^'J'^V:'V;'' over Kent's 7:05. ;•••;•'•-.a.'ttnny Bfuce routinein animi*»d cartoon;:••; (I-Ji() "'•• ' The trophy for the Connecticut Fall Regatta was donated by Mrs. James Lippincott Goodwin who We Deliver helped found the Trinity Crew and donated a shell which bears her name. Spurred on by Saturday's suc- cess, the women's crews competed in the Head of the Connecticut NEW PARK PIZZA HOUSE Regatta in Middletown on Sunday, KING OF Oct. 12th. Battling against the . 72 NEW PARK AVENUE clock in a race with fifteen other boats, Trinity scored impressively (Off Park Street) with varsity taking third place with a time of 13:29, edged out of first by HEARTS a mere 7 seconds by Northfield Open 7 Days 10 AM to 1 AM School of Mount Hermon. Second varsity persistently sendMrtiap:B?iep]nK moved down the two and a half 232-2690 mile course to place sixth out of fifteen with a time of 14:11. The Head of the Connecticut, sponsored by the city of Mid- dletown, involved thirty-two high TELEPHONE |KaresJ|ies^ schools and colleges competing in 249-7569 a series of ten events. Despite the rain, the banks were crowded with parents and friends supporting the crews. MIL Pizza House On Saturday, Oct, 18, the Trinity !|here;is'iine J'.ea.SQff % tHjsj p Henprrti^nort J Women's Crews will compete in GRINDERS - BARBECUE CHICKEN - SPAGHETTI the First National Invitational Women's Regatta in Holyoke, Mass. The varsity will compete in 863 PARK STREET COB. ZION STREET HARTFORD, CONN. several heats on the 1 7/8 mpe BRAINAHORn AT I 'ft HARTFORD course while the second varsity will row one decisive race against B-™ 10 Tln> Trinitv October 21. 1975 Tke Compiler

As a service to its readers, the Tripod offers The Compiler, a cohesive summary of all public events in and around the Trinity Community. Listing with The Compiler is free; copy deadline is the same as that for Announcements and news copy (see staff box, bot- tom of page 6.)

Meeting in Alumni Lounge, 7:00 SIMS lecture in LSC Rm. 132 at Varsity Cross Country, Trinity p.m. vs. Wesleyan, at Trinity, 4 p.m. 12:15 p.m. Israeli Folk Dancing in the Washington Room, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, October 26 Women's Tennis, Trinity vs. The Eucharist in the Main Yale, at Trinity, 3 p.m. Chapel at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, October 21 Trinity Christian Fellowship meeting in Wean Lounge, 8:30 p.m. The Town-Gown Forum lecture Compline will be read in the Newman Mass In the Faculty will be "The Dilemma of Spirit and Crypt Chapel at 10:30 p.m. Watson Fellowship interviews Friday, October 24 Club and Hamlin, 1:15 p.m. Nature: Two Contemporary Open Period continues. Examples." Given by Dr. Drew A. History Majors' Reception and continue in the Walton room of the Library. The Hartford Bah'a'i Com- Hyland, professor of Philosophy, in meeting at 4:15 p.m. in Hamlin munity Is sponsoring its third Goodwin Theatre. Austin Arts Hall, Cinestudio: "Towering Inferno" continues. annual arts festival today from 1-5 Center at 1:30 p.m., followed by an p.m. in the Auditorium of the informal coffee period. The Watson Fellowship In- Co-op food orders due by 4 p.m. to Box 2002. Ski Swap Ski Show for the benefit Hartford Insurance Group, Hart- terviews continue in the J. Walton ford Plaza. The festival will Trinity College Girls' Club will Room of the Library. of the U.S. Ski Team will be staged hold a Monte Carlo Whist in Legislative Internship Ap- at the Hartford Armory October 24- feature performing and visual arts Garmany Hall, Austin Arts Center plications due for Trinity term 26. The winter extravaganza will and various ethnic groups. Ad- Also, in the Library Lobby, a mission is free. from 7:30 p.m. This is a fund display of Book Bindings, 15th-20th 1976. See Prof. Clyde McKee. feature the 1976 line of skis and ski raising event of the Club, and Century will be shown through equipment, and will also have on tickets for $1.50 may be purchased October 30. In the Trumbull Room, Cinestudio: the "Towering In- display used merchandise offered Ski Swap continues; hours today, at the door. There will be refresh- a Binding display will continue ferno" plays at 7:30 p.m. for sale by skiers who are 12 noon-fi p.m. ments, door prizes, and a preview through December 31. graduating to newer gear. Those sale of handcrafted items which SIMS Lecture in LSC at 4:00 p.m. who want to sell skis and equip- Cinestudio: "The Phantom of the Club will have for its Holiday Josef Albers'Screenprints are on ment may bring their goods into Liberty", 7::M); "Images", 9:30, Fair. The public is invited. display in Austin Arts Center. the main entrance of the Armory HiiP between 10 a.m. Friday and 5 p.m. Gwendolyn Brooks, official poet Students' International Saturday, Oct. 24-25. Skis longer laureate of the state of Illinois and Meditation Society Lecture, 7:00 in iiiili than 205 centimeters will not be a Pulitzer Prize winner will read LSC 132, Thursday, October 23 accepted, nor will wooden skis or her poetry in Life Science Center Open Period begins—no classes. lace boots. The selling fee is 20%. Monday, October 27 Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. The public Proceeds from the show will go to Classes Resume is invited. Sponsored by the Trinity Trinity College Urban and En- the U.S. Ski Team to underwrite Coalition of Blacks. vironmental Studies program with Olympic training. Admission is 99* Student Government Association Trinity Rensselaer Institute for adults, 50* children. Display booths Budget Committee meeting, 3-fi Mr. Dingman will discuss the Community Education will present will be open 4-10 p.m. today. p.m. in Alumni Lounge, College Venture Program in a lecture-discussion entitled "The Alumni Lounge from 9 a.m. to 12 Wednesday, October 22 Social Consequences of Neigh- La Voz Latina meets in Alumni noon. Football Highlights of Satur- borhoods and Regions as Political Lounge, 7-9 p.m. day's game will be shown in Units." The speaker will be Prof. Playing in Cinestudio tonight are Alumni Lounge at 12 noon. Bring a Albert Hunter in the Washington Cinestudio: "The Phantom of "Jules and Jim" 7:30, and sandwich. Room at 8 p.m. Liberty": 7:30; "Images"—9:30. "Donkey Skin" 9:30. Admission Saturday, October 25 $1.50 w/ID, $2.00 general. Eucharist in the Friendship Varsity Football, Trinity vs. Important announcement for all Cinestudio: "Towering Inferno" MIMlebwy, at Trinity 1:30 p.m. Chape\ at 12:30. continues. photographers: There will be a Freshman Soccer, Trinity vs. crucial meeting for all Ivy Manchester Community College, Varsity Soccer, Trinity vs. Cinestudio: "Towering Inferno" (yearbook) photographers and Mather Hall Board of Governors continues. at Trinity, 3 p.m. Bentley, at Bentley, 3:30 p.m. Meeting in Alumni Lounge at 7:30 anyone interested in being one on p.m. Ski Swap continues; hours Monday, October 27 at 7:30 in the Hebrew Table in the Cave, today. Student Government Association today. 10 a.m.-lQ p.m. Seabury Ivy Office. Please come and bring all recent photos. BEER KEGS TUESDAY at TIMOTHY'S ALL BRANDS New Penguins Warm Your Heart ALWAYS COLD - at your campus ALWAYS IN STOCK/ With BOWLS OF CHILI bookstore WE DELIVER 90* Featuring Hartford's Finest Selection of Imported 6 Domestic Wines and'Spirits • MintenenV Prices. (Over the Rocks)

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