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Sflte© Tot]) Fripb'the Problem' Fraternities 'The Problem' Page 5 Sflte ©tot]) fripb Page 4 VOL NO. 7 TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD OCTOBER 25J_1966 Five Professors, Renegade Priest, to Teach-in Tonight A renegade priest who lived in cently published MEXICO, THE the jungles of Bolivia for ten years CHALLENGE OF POVERTY AND and five college professors will ILLITERACY and THE MEXICAN The Trinity Pipes will present speak at the Latin American WAR--WAS IT MANIFEST DES- their sixth annual "Buttondown Teach-in scheduled for tonight, at TINY? Sounds" show on Saturday, Novem- 7:30 in McCook Auditorium, Author Hugh Hamill Jr., editor ber 5, as part of the Homecoming Felix McGowan, Maryknoll Mis- of DICTATORSHIP IN SPANISH Weekend festivities. sioner. for 15 years, spent ten IN AMERICA, is currently bring- The show, to be held in the years In the Bolivian jungles or- ing out another book: THE HID- Washington Room at 7:30that night, ganizing a Colonizing Cooperative -ALGO REVOLT; PRELUDE TO is recognized as one of the finest for runaway slaves. He coordin- MEXICAN INDEPENDENCE, Mr. of its kind, bringing professional ated summer work programs for Hammill Is professor of history and collegiate singing groups from American college students In Latin at the University of Connecticut. all over New England together America for three years. In 1963 Presently teaching at New York for the evening's entertainment. >. when he visited Cuba, the Mary- University, John Gerassl was for- AH proceeds of the show, a sell- •4o knoll Mission silenced him for his merly head of the Latin Ameri- out every year in the past, are do- favorable reports on the Cuban can Bureau for NEWSWEEK and nated to the Pipes scholarship Revolution. Reinstated, he traveled is the author of THE GREAT Fund. to Tanzania and worked there for FEAR IN LATIN AMERICA. two years. He was granted laici- Gilbert W. Merkx, a resident of Featured in the 1966 edition along .•> zation (layman status) in 1965 and Venezuela for eleven years, re- with the Pipes are the Wheaton is presently working for the "Cath- ceived his B.A. from Harvard Wheatones, the Boston Brahmins, olic Worker" movement In New and his M.A. from Yale, After and the Trinidads. A special added York City. becoming a Fulbright Scholar In attraction Is the return of Michael Five professors, all experts in 1963 in Peru, he became an In- ) f Karp, '69, as emcee. Latin American Affairs, will also structor In sociology and public ' | The Wheaton Wheatones return MIKE KARP "69 will return to the College in November to emcee participate in the Teach-in. Pro- health at Yale- He is now com- I to Hartford after adding to the the Pipes' Buttondown Sounds Show. Karp's wit sparked The fessor of History at Smith Col- pleting a dissertation" on economic 'in- | success of last Spring's Collegiate New Collegiate Jazz Band's concert last spring. lege, Ramon Eduardo Ruiz, re- and political change In Argentina. rds | Sound Show in the Bushnell Audl- iat. torium. They delighted the au- A lecturer , on Latin American tlie diences with their ribald Peace affairs and a lay minister in the id a Corps and Playboy Bunny songs.. Unitarian Church, David Leonard only j A departure from the previous Dr. Jacobs, Faculty Panel to Welcome lsa professor pf .Latin American two all-collegiate singing groups is •history at the • American" inter- riof- ' the appearance of a professional national College. is ol group, the Boston Brahmins. Fea- Parents at Annual Weekend Reception The Teach-in format features rrillj tared in' the Brahmins Is Bill brief ten minute talks by each line-' Minot last year's emcee and for- A buffet luncheon, a discussion of a two part program is planned. The- Trinidads. The second act speaker on Latin American affairs, Ban-( mer member of the Pipes, a student's life after college, the First, parents of freshmen will will feature the New Collegiate followed by a question and answer : be addressed by P.r.. ..Jacobs, on Jazz .Band,.. the; Travelers, ..tap period. "Audience participation is line. The Trinidads will present the Coast Guard football game,, a J play same high quality of vocalizing reception by the President, and "Your•Son and His-«©oliegef" and dancing --byKevinDaly 67- and the vital-iop th& Teach-in," says James '& which has captivated spring vaca- a concert of "Trinity "Music on then a panel consisting of Dean College Band. Kaplan '68 president of' SDS. >ugh~ tlon audiences at Nassau's Grand Parade," will all be a part of Vogel, Dr. George Cooper, Dr. On Sunday- there will be the usual Thorne Sherwood Jr., Modern -14, | Bahamas Club, this year's Parents' Weekend to Gustave Andrian, Prof. Stewart, Chapel services at 10:30 a.m. and Language instructor at the Col- iltedf Closing the show as usual will be held Saturday and Sunday, Mr. John Butler, and Dr. Scheuch 5 p.m. Dr, Edmond LaB. Cher- lege, will moderate the sym- who • be the Pipes, the College's oldest Parents visiting their sons for and members of the College Com- bonnier will deliver the homily posium. "Rather than lecturing and tha singing group. The Pipes have the weekend will register In the mittee on Graduate Fellowships, at the morning service and Chap- speaking down to the audience, a 5 80 performed their diversified pro- Austin Arts Center Saturday morn- will answer questions from the lain Alan C. Tull will speak at question and answer period will ers, gram on radio and television, as ing and be treated to a coffee hour parents of upperclassmen con- Vespers. (Continued on Page 6) eed- i| well as on various recordings and with faculty and their sons. Fol- cerning their sons'futures. nost in Carnegie Hall, lowing a greeting by President joint This year's show is being re- Albert C. Jacobs at 10;30 they will A buffet luncheon in the Field Taylor Characterizes Cicero meet In Goodwin Theater for a House will precede the freshman irds corded by S & M master re- meeting of the Parents Associa- . soccer game with Wesleyan at cordings. Tickets will be on sale tion. 1 p.m. and the varisty football As Seeker of Glory, Praise In the Mather Hall foyer. game with Coast Guard at 2 p.m. In the Austin Arts Center at 11:15 Characterizing Cicero as a "sen- Taylor was educated at the Un- The President will receive par- sitive extrovert,'' reflecting the iversity of Wisconsin and received ents and their sons between 5 temper of the Roman civilization, her doctorate at Bryn Mawr, where Watkinson Celebrates 100 and 6 p.m. Saturday at his home. Dr. Lily Ross Taylor delivered she is presently professor em- The majority of the fraternities, the second Mead Lecture in His- eritus of Latin. She has also re- also plan; receptions for the par- tory to an audience numbering ceived several honorary degrees Years-"as Hartford Library ents of the brothers and pledges. about 200 in Krleble Auditorium and is the author of two books The Watkinson Library is now lege in 1952 when it no longer Saturday evening, in the Goodwin last Tuesday. on Ancient Roman History. more than a century old. It of- could support itself publically. The Theater at 8:15, the Glee Club Lecturing on trie topic "Cicero ficially opened to the public on stipulation was that the library re- will sponsor the Thirteenth Annual as a Mirror, of his Age," Pro- •October 18, 1866, as a public li- main intact and its purposes up- Parents Night Concert, entitled fessor Taylor cited a body of 774 Independents brary with a variety of books that held. .. : . : • ' . "Trinity Music on Parade." Par- letters written by Cicero between other libraries in Hartford could Mrs. Clarke has been curator of ticipants will be the Pipes, the Glee 70 and 40 B.C. which depict the not afford. the library •since. 1958. She has Club, Richard Turk '70 (piano "inside story" of Rpman times, Council David Watkinson, one of Hart- organized the collections and-gen- soloist), the Pip.esand Drums and pointing out that society Rested ford's successful businessmen of eral content of the library and heavily upon theUftsiHtttt^ifOf sla- "Qitr ultimate aim Is to be re- the 19th century, willed funds for has much of it cross-referenced very. She told her audience that cognized by the College as a cor- the establishment of a free public in the catalogues of the College's from these letters modern his- porate group, the Independent library, its policy was to purchase library. In addition, Mrs. Clarice torians have gathered endless de- Council, speaking for the inde- and compile books that the existing has added to the library's different To the Student Body: tails on Roman social and family pendent community on campus," Hartford libraries did not- have, collections with gifts and special life, marriage and divorce, man- said Carl Levitsky '68. He, David so that the public could enjoy more purchases. ners, morals, and culture.. She Borus '68, and Lucien Wilson '67 diversity in literature. Some .of the special fields of the cultural beauty of the Latin lang- are concerned with the need for Recently, many campus uage~was preserved in Cicero's a council of Independents rep- The library was established In library, are;. Bibliographies, gra- notices have been torn down. la phic arts, ornathology, witchcraft 58 speeches, poems, and rhetorical resenting the ever-growing group 58, but because of delays in The publicity of several or- essays.; , of non-fraternity men here. Purchasing and the Civil Warit was and ghosts, early voyages and ex- ganizations, particularly that plorations, linguistics anddialects Professor Taylor also;informed Borus and Levitsky are co-cfialr- unable to compile its original of S.D.S.
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