- ir 1 ~ 1 ' •,"!' The Capital Campaign: Where's the $50 Million Going? According to Dean of Ad- provides the President's office and -By David Kilborn- missions David M. Borus, chair- Board of Trustees with a candi- Special to the Tripod man of the newly established date, the current Acting Director president's search committee to of Development, Laurence S. The change of presidents at find a successor to Ware, the Duffy, will continue to run vari- Trinity this past J uly, coupled with process was delayed by Gerety's ous fundraising efforts and solicit the death of former Vice Presi- arrival. Borus added that the gifts. Duffy said the Annual fund, dent of Development, Constance president had to acclimate him- which is completed each fiscal Ware, has left the college without self to Trinity before he could year, is still functioning smoothly a concrete plan for long range address the college's specific need despite the lack of long term goals development of the school's en- for funds. for capital gifts. dowment and faculty. The search committee, President Gerety's desire to Though Trinity recently formed in a letter from Gerety to raise Trinity's academic reputa- raised$5O,397,989 inathree-year Borus tion through increasing the size capital campaign, $8 million on October 4th, met once on and salaries of the faculty is well above the original goal, Ware's October 26th and will convene known. Athisinaguration Gerety death has left the development again on December 1 lth. At the said,"I say to those colleges who office without a permanent direc- October meeting, and through have come today, and to some tor to lead a new cycle of fun- personal contact between Borus who have not, we will fight you draising. and members of the committee, for our faculty, tooth and nail and Thus Gerety finds himself in an approximate deadline of Janu- salary and city—we want the best a position akin to President ary 1 for applications for the job and we will have the best. There Bush's. Gerety wants money for of head of development has been must be no better place to teach more faculty as Bush needs money established. The committee will and no better place to do research." to fight drugs, but the budgets of then assess the candidates by the Gerety insists that while no both constrain their ambitions. end of February. formal plan has been instituted to Gerety's position also marks Borus said the job descrip- provide Trinity with the funds what could be a significant reori- tion is still being worked on and it needed for his new policy, he entation or change in fundraising should be announced sometime firmly stands behind his inaugu- objectives. He would depart from next week. The Board of Trustees ration address and assures that Many Trinity Alums brought their childtren when they returned to campus the emphasis in recent years on will make the final decision. any new capital campaign will lor Homecoming. See story on back page for more about the Bantams Until the search committee most likely look for funds for g y pgh o brick and mortar projects. bki i P hot record-breaking victory over Wesleyan. P ° by Kathleen s. Thom.is academic purposes and not brick and mortar projects. Duffy and Bob A.Pedemonti, Security -Names- Assistant Directors Vice President for Finance and Boston. She graduated from Stan- half years, expectations, stan- Olson supervises the C squad Treasurer, expressed the same -By Rich Zednick- ford University in 1986. dards, and pay have all risen. which runs from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.. view. Duffy said the college will News Writer The advantage of having two Having two assistant direc- Security is, as most members of be positioning for "long term people filling the position is that tors has been especially valuable the Trinity Community are fully academics, not real building." Trinity Security is banking more work is able to be covered while Mr. Rucci has been absent aware, a vital part of life at Trin- TofulfillGerety'sobjectives, °n the expression that "two heads more effectively. The change in due to medical reasons. ity- a new capital campaign will have are to earmark a large portion of funds ^tter than one". Following structure is another step in Undernormal circumstances, The Security Department for academic programs, specifi- mis summer's resignation of Bill Trinity's effort to further profes- the force is divided into A squad, ensures the safety of students, and cally new faculty positions and Mlivan, former assistant secu- sionalize the security departmen t. B squad, and C squad. Mr. Rucci as it is said that, "It is better to be Under the supervision of Dean of is in charge of the A squad which safe than sorry." With two new faculty research. Pedemonti noted nty director, Tony Bostick and that "50% to 60% of most col- wmOlson were hired as co-assis- Students David Winer and Direc- is on duty from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., Assistant heads of Security, Trin- tor of Security Bill Rucci, who Mr. Bostick heads the B squad ity intends to become even safer leges' expenditures are labor re- ts to replace Sullivan. Continued on Page 5 Each of the newcomers is has now been here for two and a from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., and Ms. than it has been for years. ngJ, well-educatedwlld , and welll qualified for the job. Bostick, >™ began his work here in July, Trinity Grads Spar in Council Race Pataited from American Inter- national College in 1980 with a tive Republican alumnus, nar- Council is believed to be the only campaign propaganda. HAin Education. He learned valu- -By Jay Akasie- rowly defeat John Bonelli '74, an opposing factor to the Council's Campaign literature, which * "people skills" while work- New Writer alumnus representing the progres- anticipated swing to more liberal bore the name of the Connecticut 78 at Philip Morris and gained sive People for Change party. policies. Citizens for Decency, said "Say ^ol|ege campus security experi- The fierce contest for the last Roger B. Ladd, in his re-election Besides Ladd, the Council no to John Bonelli and immoral- ence at Wesleyan University. three seats on the Hartford City retained its six Democratic seats, ity." It went on to state that n to the City Council, has the dis- I ° '""rived in August follow- Council attracted much attention tinction of retaining one of the last and the two held by the People for homosexuals are at high risk of ng her work on the Oregon state on Election Day, November 8. positions of Hartford government Change party. The Majority spreading AIDS, which "decent P"«ce force and two and a half The "Battle of the Trinity Grads" 1 Democrats, as in the past, control citizens" pay to treat through taxes. ars Wlt held by the GOP. Ladd s position • » an accounting firm in saw Roger Ladd '50, a conserva- as the sole Republican on the City the Council, but (he People for The pamphlet said to vote for Change members had promoted a Republican Patrick L. Kennedy. possible coalition with two of the Kennedy denied any in- more liberal Democrats. As a volvment with the message. result of Ladd's re-election, such Kennedy said he would opt to a coalition wilt not be possible. attack an opposing candidate's The People for Change candi- issues rather than his behavior. "I date, John G. Bonelli, lost his bid believe in negative campaigning," Tuesday amidst controversy. Kennedy said. "I've done my Bonelli, the first openly homo- share of it - but I would have sexual candidate in Hartford poli- campaigned against their ideas, tics, claims he lost the third seat which are loony, but not him as a on anti-homosexual and racist person."

•Life on Other Planets •Trinity: 1982-1983 •Dada & Surrealism •Barry: The Joy of Pets PhodriSsoldT-shirts Saturday urging the Trinity community to take a firmer stand against racism. , J° Dy Sue Mui k Page 2 • The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 Opinion Resolution on Minority Hiring: Editorial One Step in Longer Process To the Editor: experience at Trinity suffers. Because initiatives such as the We see the Resolution on Minority Psi-U: Making an Impact Resolution on Minority Hiring (recently Hiring as one step in a longer process and as Earlier this semester the Tripod asked some pointed questions passed by the faculty and approved by the an initiative that should influence all hiring about the sincerity of the Psi-U Academic and Social Club. The Tripod Board of Trustees) have historically been at Trinity. There is no teaching area in the was not convinced that Psi-U was prepared to make the commitment viewed as having purposes at odds with the curriculum that is reserved for whites only; to academic and community service activities which the title of the new interests of women, we, the undersigned nor are minority faculty qualified to teach organization implied. members of the Women's Studies committee, only certain subjects. Therefore, it is The brothers of Psi-U proved they were. feel called upon to make the following important for all searches to be regarded as Over the past months, Psi-U has sponsored several lectures featur- statement. and conducted as opportunities to recruit ing faculty and student speakers. They also initiated the Homecoming minority staff. We see this proposal as an Can-Can and led their annual Blood Drive. We wholeheartedly endorse the decision of the faculty to approve the integral part of the wider effort to be create a This is the record of a fraternity which has recognized and utilized more egalitarian education environment. We its ability to make more than a social impact on the local community, Resolution on Minority Hiring. We also and for that the brothers should be commended. recognize the continuing need to hire more hope that discussion of these matters will Other fraternities, however, still lack a coherent, organized pro- women faculty. However, we regard as continue throughout the Trinity community. gram for academic and social action. Alpha Delta Phi's annual lecture, individuals the assumption that "minority" combined with the painting of a local school, is a good start. It is up to and "women" are conflicting and mutually Sincerely, the brotherhood to follow through by planning events on a continuous exclusive categories. In the first place, 52 basis. percent of the minority population are Patricia Byrne Pi Kappa Alpha was one of the sponsors of an event during the RA women; this is a specific overlap of the Leslie Craine Challenge during Alcohol Awareness Week, and theirpledges recently categories of "minority" and "women" there Cheryl Greenberg completed their community service project. It's a beginning. is surely no conflict. But beyond this, we Joan Hedrick But where are the school's other recognized Greeks? Both believe that the hiring of more men and Helen Lang sororities have philanthropy chairwomen, but aside from the Kappa women of color is a special, critical need Paul Lauter Kappa Gamma Balloon derby, we see very little evidence of any inextricably bound up with the interests of Sonia Lee philanthropic ventures. women and Women's Studies at Trinity. Dan Lloyd The Tripod does not mean to exclude other fraternities; virtually Lindsay McNair '90 all sponsor activities. But the Tripod would like to see more frequent, The presence of more minority faculty will better publicized activities, perhaps involving co-sponsorship by more further the climate that Women's Studies James Miller than one fraternity or sorority. seeks to create of an open, egalitarian, Jane Nadel-Klein A dance during Hunger and Homelessness week co-sponsored by pluralistic community in which diverse Susan Pennybacker the IFC and TCAC demonstrates the power of united fraternities. This voices as an issue inseparable from the need Helen Raisz type of approach would lend the coherence to these activities which has to increase the numbers of, particularly, Milla Riggio been lacking in the past. African-American and Latino/Latina Jane Rudd faculty. Without greater diversity, the quality Kimberly Simmons '92 Hunger & Homelessness of pedagogy and of the entire educational Anne Utz 'Trinity is "in'the midst of Hunger arid Homelessness Week. Observed at more than 600 colleges and universities nationwide, this Students Harrassed Boy Scouts week provides us with the opportunity to reflect on two of society's To the Editor: stood outside Edward's food mart want to put down? Understand most pressing problems. Amidst President Gerety's collecting donations all day. At that not every kid in Hartford is There are many of us who may choose not to attend any of the push for Trinity to give more to the following troop meeting on stealing, mugging and using drugs. activities being sponsored by student organizations this week. Many the community, I am sorry to November 8,1 was informed by If you can't respect a Boy Scout of us will stilleat in SAGA Wednesday despite pleas to sacrifice a meal report an incident that made me other leaders of the treatment who gives up an entire Saturday for the hungry in America. embarrassed to be associated with offered them by Trinity Students. for a church, who can you re- These are personal choices which each of us must make for him or the college. 1 serve as an adult Apparently, when the boys ap- spect? I guess that's the point - herself. leader for a local Boy Scout troop proached Trinity students for too many members of the Trinity None of us, however, has a choice when it comes to recognizing on New Park Avenue. This past donations, they met with re- Community have no respect for the human pain and-saerifice being cause be hunger and homelessness Saturday, November 4, the scouts sponses such as "Fuck Off' and anything. Perhaps if we treated here in the United States and throughout the world. held a fundraiser to benefit a local "Go to Hell." It was obvious that our neighbors better, we wouldn' t There are many problems in this world, so many in fact that we church charity. A few of the boys they were Trinity students because meet with so much resentment sometimes despair. But hunger and homelessness are two of the most they were proudly wearing Trin- from the local youth. basic a human can face on this Earth, and it is up to us, as some of the ity shirts and caps. Even more Such incidents should never best educated people in the world, to confront this problem. disturbing is that there were four occur here. If you can't deal Tripod such incidents that day, each in- properly with your fellow citi- volving different students. Imag- zens, then you've missed the most ine how I felt to be associated important lesson of your college TRINITY TRTPOD with such behavior. career. College prepares us for Article Despite the treatment from the rest of our lives, not just the , Robert E. Cockbu^ the Trinity students, this handful jobs we aspire to. Take full ad- ....-.'.-{I •••! ^Editor-in-Chieft\ ' of twelve-year-old boys raised vantage of what is offered here, Faulted $500 for the charity in one day. and learn not to hurt others in the How does that compare to most- process. Overall, Trinity is agreat To the Editor: service functions at Trinity? place, so don't make me ashamed The American Studies Pro- Granted, the surrounding neigh- for being part of it. gram is very much part of efforts borhood has plenty of scary char- Sincerely, ! •.-•-...-.••,.,...r-f^^fS>ns Manager to recruit more minority, faculty acters, but are these the ones you James B. Mackey '90 ' members and diversify the Col- _[ \R ••[[ '.&*ii U ii W lege community, but your story on this subject (see "Funds Allot- SGA Promotes Drive ted," October 31) scrambles some ...PI^@##&pPf|%l) of the facts. It's true that a com- mittee, chaired by Professor Jim For Soap and Toothpaste Miller is now at work on "re- To the Editor: provide a box for you to leave it vamping the American Studies This week is Hunger and in. If you don't have a dorm rep or program" to take in Afro-Ameri- Homelessness Week and the Stu- haven't been contacted, please can studies, but that group is en- dent Government hopes that you bring the item(s) to Mather Front tirely different from the Ad Hoc will participate in or soap and desk where a collection box is Committee hasii' t yet gotten to the toothpaste drive. By now your located. It is a way that you can point of renaming.American Stud- dorm rep should have contacted help someone who is less fortu- ies, proposing a new. structure to you about helping the homeless in nate than yourself. We hope that be "instituted next year," or mak- a way that is inexpensive and yet everyone will take part in Hunger ing any other fundamental deci-r serves a needy cause. All we're and Homelessness Week. Thank sion. Renewing a program that requesting is that you donate a you for your cooperation. has served the College well for new tube of toothpa'ste or a bar of Sincerely, fifteen years is a delicate busi- soap. Your dorm rep will either Melissa R. Gold '90 ness, and recruiting minority fac- All letters must be received by 5 p.m. Friday. Only letters signed by the come around and collect them or Student Government President ulty is only one of the committee' s author andmcludmgaphonenumberforverification will be considered for publication. Though there is no limit on length, the Tripod reserves the right objectives. to edit any submission over 250 words in length. Letters may be left on the Sincerely, The opinions expressed in these letters do not doorof theTnpod office (Jackson basement) or mailed to Box 13 0 The Eugene E. Leach necessarily reflect the views, thoughts, opinions. Tripod can be reached at 297-2583. ProfessorofAmericanStudiesand History or beliefs of the Tripod as a whole or in part. The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 3 Opinion Racist Graffiti Has No Place To the Editor: your affiliations. Should you be This letter is directed to the ashamed of identifying with this person(s) whom felt it necessary organization, maybe it is not the to deface the womens' room stall group for you. However, since in Mather recently with "KKK". you did not care to sign your name The KKK is not an illegal to the markings, I question the organization. Apart from the ille- extent to which you really do gal acts of murder, lynching and identify with KKK. COULD X /IS/C destroying the property of other The foregoing was written JT'/M NOT ME/ZVOvS (non-Arian) individuals as well under the assumption that the • • • NO as the questionable doctrines of markings were not a sick joke. If white supremacy, this group, too, they were, you should note that it is justified and may organize as it is not funny for the college prop- pleases as long as it does not do so erty to be defaced at the expense at the expenses of the security and of students of the present and of property of others. Organizations the future. This is a college are an important part of a plural- community not a place of graffiti. istic society because they repre- sent the interest of all groups. Sincerely, It seems to me that if the Tricia Johnson graffiti artists who support this group are so proud of such an organization as to display "KKK" on college property, they should Student Auction Story Misguided at least do so in a manner which does not deface the buildings and To The Editor, statement is not only incorrect, demic building and Alumni/Fac- gave their time and support should grounds of this college. Why hide The objective of this letter is but it is also misdirected. The ulty House, but we brought to- be commended for-their dedica- in a bathroom stall? Your pride to correct the inaccuracies found total value of the items in the gether various groups, within the . tion to the college.---* ;,..:; should not be mitigated by the in last week's article about the auction was estimated at $24,000. Trinity community for an tmpor-. • Sincerely, • .-.-.-••>•• poor reputation and ignorance of Second Student Auction for Trin- However, by no means did we tant cause. The individuals who Ngoc Dung Ho '90 ity. expect to raise that full amount. The purpose of the Novem- According to Jane Lewis from ber 2 auction was to raise money Connecticut Public Television, Trinity to Host Minority- IDPs Need for the students contribution to mostauctions raise approximately the matching funds needed to 60 to 70% of the original value of qualify for the Kresge Founda- the items. The total value of our Visitation Weekend Separate tion Challenge Grant. The Kresge live auction was $15,010. From To the Editor: component in our efforts to in- Foundation will give the College the live auction, we raised $9,705, This week, the Admissions crease diversity on our campus, $500,000 if Trinity raises an addi- which was 65% of the actual value Office will be hosting its annual encouraging the interest of many of the items. The Auction Com- Honors tional $2,000,000 by January 1, Minority Student.,.,Visitation.,.. 'hhteg J 1990. Proceeds from this grant mittee was pleased with the final Weekend. This program, which will help fund the construction of sum of the auction profits. We will take place November id-38, have had the opportunity to see the new academic building and rasied $ 13,800 which superseded will bring over 90 students of color Trinity firsthand. We hope that Program the 1987 auction by $1,800. everyone at the College will do the Alumni/Faculty House. from all over the country to Trin- what they can to make our week- To the Editor: Plans for the auction were The article concentrated too ity College. Many students and end guests feel welcomed and We are writing to express our initiated last spring by a steering much on monetary gains of the faculty have volunteered theirtime well-informed. concern regarding the inclusion committee often students in coor- auction; however, money was not to serve as hosts, advisors, and of IDP students in the election dination with Shirley Delong from the main incentive for the fun- guides for these visitors, and we Sincerely, process for department fellows the Development Office. This draising event. The intention of wish to express our gratitude for David M. Borus and in determining class rank. We group was responsible for the the auction was to bring the Trin- their cooperation. This program Dean ofAdmissions.and ,. ; .. believe it is essentially unfair to groundwork of the auction. In ity community on an issue such has proven to be an important Financial Aid • .: ' ,.;..,; .„ asses IDP students on the same addition, 45 students volunteered as improving college facilities. basis as undergraduate students their services on the night of the Many dedicated people gave their who are enrolled on a full-time auction. time and support to sponsor this SGA Urges All To Attend basis. MarkRussell implied that the event for the Trinity community. While full-time undergradu- auction was not a successful as We were able to solicit over 180 ate students are required to com- the as expected; on the contrary, gifts from businesses, faculty, stu- JeUo-Wrestling Match plete nine course credits in an aca- the Second Student Auction for dents, and staff. That in itself, was Dear Editor, The event, which will take demic year, IDP students, by Trinity was an extraordinary ac- a tremendous feat. The Student Government place in the Ferris Athletic Cen- definition, have more discretion complishment. In this sense, the Second association would like to urge all ter, promises to be much fun for in selecting the intensity and pace Russell stated that "auction Annual Student Auction for Trin- students to attend the Jello-Wres- all participants and spectators. of their studies; the GP A and other officials had hoped to raise ity was far more successful than tling Match sponsored by B-PS'I- There wilt be twelve matches academic achievements of the two $24,000 from the more than 180 we had ever hoped. We not only (Black Power Serves Itself) on featuring the likes of Mike Adams groups are simply not comparable. items" and that "most items sold raised a comparable amount for Saturday November 18, at 7:00 {Channel 3.; Eyewitness News We realize the many con- below the estimated value." This the construction of the new aca- p.m. It is not often that the SGA Sportscaster), and Asst. Dean of straints placed upon IDP students, endorses events, but in this situ- Students Kirk Peters. In addition who are typically working full- ation the entire SGA voted unani - there will be two interfraternity time and are often supporting mously to support this fundraiser. battles. AD will take on Pike families. In no way do we intend SHAC Sponsors All proceeds will benefit a schol- while PS1-U squares off against to demean their efforts or imply arship fund for Hartford students Crow. that they are not worthy to re- seeking higher education. Tickets will be on sale in ceive academic recognition. Great American Our President has called upon advance outside SAGA all week IDP students deserve credit the college to "invest in our for $5 and $6 at the door. where credit is due — in a sepa- community," and there is no bet- The SGA hopes that all stu- rate honors program which re- ter way than investing in opportu- dents will attend the event and flects the distinct quality of their Smokeout nity of education. The impor- support this very worthy cause. st"dies. Regardless of whether To the Editor: ease, cancers of mouth, pharynx, tance of this scholarship can not Sincerely, the difficulties and challenges con- On Thursday, November bladder and many others. be underestimated. Student Government Assoc. fronting IDP students are greater 16th, the Student Health Advi- SHAC invites all students, or less than those of undergradu- sory Committee (SHAC) will be administrators, and staff members ates, it is inappropriate to evalu- sponsoring the Great American to help a friend, or colleague quit ate them on an equal basts. To do Smokeout here on campus. The smoking for one day. We would so renders an injustice to the en- smokeout was devised to give like to think that this may be the Are you Angry? 'ire academic community. smokers an incentive to quit the first step towards permanent quit- death threatening habit. In the ting. Those interested in sponsor- ingsomeone can sign upatMather Sincerely, United States, 40% men and 30% women smokers die prematurely. Lobby Thursday, November 16th Disturbed? penise Chicoine '90 or send their name and sponsor- Linda Dipaolo '90 Many are unaware that ap- proximately 5% of cigarette ship to the Medical Office c/o Marie Dempsy'90 SHAC. Thank-you and, don't Amy Kelly '90 smoke is carbon monoxide, which Write the Tripod deprives the body of oxygen and forget dippers and chewers are Meg Watters '90 also smokers. LwaTomlinson'90 causes the heart to over-work. Cigarette smoking also increases Sincerely, fasten Braatz '90 SHAC Box1310 Lynn Prascione '90 the risk of acquiring heart dis- Page 4'* The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989

Hubbard Leads Drive for Women's Ice Hockey Club

come and play, but we want as -By Patrick Q. Keane- many as we can get, we just want Sports Editor to play." The girls will be able to use There has not been a woman Kinswood-Oxford rink during the representing Trinity in ice hockey week, but right now they are for as long as anyone can remem- worried about finding more girls ber. But, with a little luck, all that and getting everyone to come out could change very soon. and try it, even if they have never KelseyHubbard '93 is trying played. to spark interest among the women If you are interested in play- of Trinity to start a. Women's Ice ing or would like more informa- Hockey Club. Because many tion please contact Kelsey Hub- girls have played in prep schools bard through box#l 111. Former Presi in the east and would like to start nt English, President Gerety, and Mrs. En a club or team here, Kelsey, and many like her, are trying to find the student support and more girls Student Bands Rocking Trinity to start a program. "I played in prep school and on rhythm and lead guitar, Fell guitar, Peter Alegi '92 on Bon- of Mahatma." I really wanted to play in col- Herdeg '93 on bass, Tad Cone '93 rBy Dana Cimilluca- gos, Tom Brunemeyer '90 on bass Another band which is just lege", says Hubbard, "Trinity Special to the Tripod on drums, and Craig Woerz '93 and Bob Daily '90 on congos. starting out, as yet unnamed, fea- loses women to othercolleges due on keyboards. Initially comprised They've played in the Under- tures Walter Yang '92 on Bass, to the fact that they do not have of two acoustic guitars and a bass, ground, in four of the fraternities, Aaron Grazado '92 on lead gui- •any [ice] hockey for girls." There is a wealth of musical the band has played at the Under- in the Washington Room and in tar, Rhoades Alderson '92 on lead Already there has been a solid talent at Trinity, yet surprisingly ground, the 8-man, on the Cave various other places around cam- vocals, and Scott Hoerle '92 on response from girls in all classes, rock and roll bands are an endan- patio, and at DKE to open for Hot pus. drums. and hopefully more will come Acoustics on Halloween. Its style gered species here. A few student They are distinguished by a Although the above-men- forward. Hubbard says, "We are has featured a three-part harmony bands have made appearances soulful array of sounds character- tioned bands are indeed impres- hoping to have about 15 to 20 on songs written by among others throughout campuses, however. ized by two acoustic guitars which sive, they represent very similar girls. If we have that many we can The Allman Brothers, The Band, One new band called Greasy capture the songs they play. In types of music while there seems start to practice. We are not sure Spoon features Chris Wiedemann Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead. February the band plans torecord about the number of girls that will to be a dearth in the representation on lead guitar, Marc Furigay '93 With the addition of a drum- its first , one which will of others. There are, for example, mer and^keyboardist, the band's feature a mix of cover tunes and no notable Reggae or hard rock acoustic guitars will be replaced its own, called tentatively "Friend bands around. uses with electric and the focus will shift somewhat more towards the instruments and the players' abili- ties, which most will find quite To Fight Hunger impressive. Security Blotter "This week is a nationwide Perhaps the most prominent band on campus is Babylon Rug. educational event sponsored on -By Alex Dolan- With a repetoire of tunes similar New Writer over 600 college campuses by the to that of Greasy Spoon among a Wednesday, Nov. 8 at 12:49 p.m. - Jones Dorm: Student National Student Campaign few originals, its members include received a telephone call by an anonymous caller with a Against Hunger,"' said Jen Van Duck Reich '90 on keyboards, low voice asked if student knew another student and asked •Trinity's Second -Annual Campen '90, who is one of the Aaron Lippert '92 on lead guitar, to speak to same when student responded yes and that he Hunger and Homelessness Week organizers of the week. Gary McCrumb '91 on rhythm was with him. Caller then started asking about brown will be held November 13-19. loafers and the smell of same, at which time student hung Several events are scheduled for up. the week, which will address the Schedule of Events homelessness issue in and around Tuesday, November 14- Benefit concert 8 p.m. -12 a.m. in Wednesday,Nov. 8 at4:09 a.m. -Mather: Student requested the Hartford community. the Underground sponsored by Community Outreach featuring Medical Escort to infirmary for treatment of a cold. ConnPIRG is sponsoring the Trinity Bands. " • week's activities. Wednesday, Nov 8. at 2:50 p.m. - Security Office: Student "The week has four major Wednesday, November 15 - Oxfarm fast, a fundraiser for reported that on Tuesday November 7,1989 at 8:00 p.m. on goals, " said Sakina Natar '92, international humger relief projects, sponsored by Community New Britain Avenue (Off Campus) he was assaulted and Hunger Campaign intern at Outreach, "Homelessness Hits Home' an awareness event robbed of $100. Student had just come from the Barney ConnPIRG. "[We would like] lo sponsored by ConnPIRG on the Cave patio 7 p.m. Students and faculty will spend the night outdoors (7 p.m. to 9 a.m.), joining Machine at CBT. Student was walking and from behind educate the entire Trinity com- more than 600 other schools -marking national "Hunger and heard a voice call "Hey!," when he turned, one of the two munity of the problems of hunger Homelessness Week." 7 p.m. to 11 p.m..participants will listen subjects struck student on the cheek and left eye causing an- and homelessness, to promote to presentations by current and former homeless people from the abrasion and a bruise, then demanded money. Student public activism on the issues, to community, as well as advocates for the homeless. reported same to police at time incident occurred. increase public service, and to raise funds to alleviate the prob- Thursday, November 16 - Lecture on world hunger by M. Wednesday, Nov. 8 at 11:30 p.m. - Library: Student stated lem of hunger and homelessness Hirsehon an anti-hunger activist, sponsored by Kappa Kappa she left Library after she became uncomfortable when a on local, national, and interna- Gamma at" 4 p.m. in Wean Lounge, "The Hungry and the man was staring at her. Student has seen subject on tional levels." Homeless in Our Community," a panel discussion with local leaders sponsored by Community Outreach at 7 p.m. in Boyer Saturday 11 /4/89 and was watching her then as she studied • An event will be held each Auditorium (Life Science Center). on the third floor. On Wednesday 11/8/89 while studying day of the week. Yesterday, the in the basement student noticed subject again, and as she film "Out and Down in America" Friday, November 17 - Benefit fortheHomeless, sponsored was leaving noticed subject was masturbating. Security and a discussion were held. by the Inter-fraternity Council and the Trinity College Activities Officers found subject and asked same to leave. Concerts, fundraisers, and lectures Council. will occur throughout Ihe week. Thursday, Nov. 9 at 9:11 p.m. - Life Science: Student working In addition, the SGA Soap and Sunday, November 19 - "Hunger in Hartford," ;a trilogue Toothpaste drive, and a literature in one of the labs reported she saw a male enter same and sermon by a worker at alocal soup kitchen, a member of the started to reach for a glass beaker on the counter. When display will continue until No- Trinity Hunger Campaign and the Chaplain, 11 a.m. in the vember 19. : : subject spotted student, he turned and left quickly down Chapel. ;.: -.-•.. ':••-. / •• • ' . " the stairs. Security Officer checked entire building with Students Organized Against Throughout the week: \ negative results. Racism, the International Club, • Fundraising projects-sponsored by the RAprogram, Hillel the Christian Fellowship, Cincs- andAlESEC. \- : ^ tudio, PSA, and the Trinity Col- Friday, Nov. 10 at 1:40 a.m. - Elton: Students reported she • Soap and Toothpaste drive - sponsored by the SGA ' lege Chapel also are sponsoring : was boiling water in her room and tripped over cord. Water • Literature displays - sponsored by Community Outreach the events. spilled onto her left foot, causing a burn to same. Student and ConnPIRG. in the library and throughout Mather Campus transported to Medical Office for treatment. Center/.. .• • •; . •••• V •••' •• '• •• - '• : ' The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 5 News Life on Other Planets

WILLIAMS COLLEGE report released by the school's AMHERST COLLEGE Delta Kappa Epsilon's presidential search committee lists In what will surely be the (DKE) troubles continue on the several items on the agenda of the first of several fee increases by national collegiate scene. DKE new executive, who, when named, NESCAC schools, Amherst an- troubles at Colgate are well docu- will be Bates sixth president. nounced that their general fee will mented, and the chapter at Bow- The report list finding an increase to $19,915 next year. The doin has been placed on suspen- optimum student body size, rais- general fee includes the total costs sion by the school until December ing the school's endowment and of a year at Amherst, including 4, 1989. Apparently their DKE raising Bates' overall fundraising tuition, and room and board. The broke several Maine state drink- capabilities as the most immedi- increase is over 10 percent, and ing laws and InterFraternity Coun- ate problems facing the new presi- over 96 percent in the last ten cil regulations during a Saturday dent. years. afternoon happy hour held in September.- WESLEYAN HARVARD UNIVERSITY The list of violations include The faculty at Wesleyan has Nineteen students showed up selling alcohol directly to guests, established a quorum in their for the first meeting of Harvard's failing to register the event with meetings for the first time since newest club, the Society of Nerds Kelley Lynch '90 looks draibed after giving blood. Photo by Sue Muik the College, and dispensing alco- William Chace became president, and Geeks (SONG). Song hol to minors. Drunken students and that group subsequently voted wants to promote the awareness leaving the party pulled a fire him out as chairman of their fac- of the plight of nerds and geeks. Psi-U Sponsors alarm and a Bowdoin security ulty meetings. The amendment They will promote nerd-like be- guard was injured responding to was proposed last fall to promote havior, including movie showings the call. better attendance at faculty meet- of "Real Genius" and "Revenge ings. of the Nerds," have B YOB (Bring Host of Programs BATES COLLEGE Chace praised the movement Your Own Books) parties, and This year's first Psi-Upsi- plained Crissman. "There was Bates is in the process of as "a good thing in terms of logic." hold all-geek dances, where no lon Blood Drive was one of the a longer wait this year than nor- choosing a new president, and a dance music will be played. most successful ever at Trinity. mal because of the great turn- Charles Crissman '91 and Tony out, but next semester we'll be Paruszewski '91 .the blood drive better prepared, and the Whole 50 Students Attend Rally coordinators, organized the operation should run more myriad volunteers and donors smoothly." vention on their part." Fleckner penses for the trip to D.C, over in the Washington room last Neither Psi-U nor the Red -By Nicole Moretti- added, "It shouldn't be a govern- $300 were donated by faculty Wednesday. Cross expected such a large Capy Editor ment decision. Each individual members, administration, and the The positive reaction on the turnout, although last spring should have the choice to decide Dean of Students Office. Addi- part of the students was unfore- Trinity remained the only to abort or not." tional sponsors were the PSA and seen and caused an increase in school in Connecticut who Last Sunday over 425,000 Boroughs said, "The num- Trinity Women's Organization the time needed to move all of received an award for their attended an abortion rally in bers add up for Pro-Chioce in (TWO) who gave $200 and $300 the donors through the process. Blood Drive efforts. Washington D.C. Students For Connecticut, but we want to send respectively. "I think it is important to give The Red Cross will be return-'" Choice (SFC), a subcommittee of a very clear message to the legis- Boroughs stated, "We are blood, bur in" order "to aftracF •TftgWftprtJ for PsMTsienth- the Progressive Student Alliance lature that we want choice. We're not just a one issue group. There more people, the process must year hosting the event. Volun- with the Red (PSA), sent approximately 50 expecting ahuge Trinity turn-out." are all shades of gray within be expedited; It took an hour teer programs Trinity students down to take part The SFC is also contemplat- choice. It is a critical issue but we and a half from start to finish, Cross are available. Interested in the events. The students left ing a future involvement with need to broaden our scope be- and that is quite a large block of persons should contact the Red Saturday midnight and returned Connecticut middle schools to cause some people just don't know time in a student's busy sched- Cross at 678-2841(2842) or early Monday morning. Coordi- discuss sexual education. "If we any better. ule," said Rachel Zoob '92, a Charles Crissman at 549-6714, nated by the National Organiza- can prevent pregnancy, we can The SFC is coordinated by blood donor. Box 86. tion for Women (NOW), the group prevent a possible abortion, " Anne Stuart with Prof. Fulco as "The number of donors is Psi-U urged all members attended speeches from 11:30- Boroughs commented. faculty advisor. Meetings are held up from 72 last spring to about of the Trinity Community to 4:00 by NOW, Planned Parent- The SFC received tremen- every Sunday at 9:30 PM in the 140 this fall. Both we and the attend their upcoming events, hood, the N A ARAL, (and Whoopi dous support from Trinity faculty Rittenberg Lounge. All are wel- Red Cross dealt with this great one of which will be a Christ- Goldberg) and others. and various organizations. In come to attend. influx as best we could," ex- mas-tree trimming. The SFC students joined the order to decrease personal ex- Pro-Choice group by the Lincoln Memorial while the Anti-Abor- tionists maintained a position at Allocation of Capital Campaign Funds the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. campaign objectives, ending 6.1 % As Professor Ward S. Cur- paign, Trinity has hired five new Although the events usually do Continued from Page 1 above budget. ran, Chairman of the Economics members. Two posts still remain not become violent, possible As of June 30,1989, the col- department explains, "In the eyes open. One is in the recruitment confrontations were squelched by lege had received $6.5 million in of the students [Trinity] probably stage at this time. The other is police lines formed by the DC lated. Trinity's is around 51%, direct funding for seven new fac- would be better to have more being held open for curricular and Capitol police forces. which is low because we do not pay workers in Marriott or the ulty positions that were approved faculty positions... [to fund fac- renewal which allows the Trinity Jamie Fleckner 91' feels that bookstore ... the average salary by the Board of Trustees. The de- ulty positions over research] is a to hire a professor for one to three the large turnout was reflective of for a full Professor [at Trinity] is cision to cut future funding from very difficult trade-off that... [the years to teach a subject new to the the pro-choice opinion which he $57,000 with benefits pulling it outstanding pledges to create more college] is unable to ignore. college. feels to be pervasive in American than seven new positions is in- [Trinity ] wants a faculty that does Conn does not see the future now. He stated, "I feel the Pro- up to about $70,000." Trinity will have to add $1 consistent with the new both teaching and research." as bright for hiring more faculty Choice has always been the ma- due to a lack of funds. Ten new million to the endowment to hire President's objective to promote "I think we would be better jority, but until now it has been a off with more faculty because we positions in the next five years are each new professor, said Alan R. academics. generally silent one. This rally are trying to do an experimental Cohn's view of ideal progress, Sauer, Budget Director for Trin- Gerety stressed that he wants will allow our voice to be truly curriculum that requires it," said but, she explained, five is a more ity. to "distance himself from the heard. This is my first rally, and Curran. "The students would realistic number. The recently Finished capital preceding campaign as to not I'm glad to have this oppurtunity appear to judge ... in hindsight." probably agree that with more However, of these five per- as a college student and as a vot- campaign, publically announced professors they would be better sonnel, three will filled by mi- over three years ago, only partly The original Campaign for Trin- ing American to have my vioce ity literature says the primary need off, however, the decision to raise norities in conjunction with the heard within the political process. took into account the large need [Trinity's] reputation through school's efforts to promote diver- for present academic funding. of the college in 1984 and 1985 This is a cause I stand strongly were to improve the physical plant research is certainly valid and sity. The cost of these instructors behind." $15.7 million was originally many young professors on the will be offset through elimination budget for all academic purposes after an earlier major planning Lizbet Boroughs, the SFC effort concluded that "new con- tenure track would be in favor of of some part time personnel. Fundraising Coordinator who which included $10.5 million for this stance." According to Cohn's predic- new faculty positions and $1.0 struction and major renovations organized Trinity's part in the to existing facilities were needed However, Dr. Jan K. Conn, tions, Trinity will be able to hire million for faculty research and rally, stated, "The SFC doesn't to prepare Trinity for the next Dean of the Faculty, feels that only two more professors over the support. advocate abortion, we advocate generations of students." while new faculty members are next five years that are not based The same academic pro- choice. We believe that the gov- Along with the loss of almost needed, she says it is more impor- entirely on student demand, un- ernment has no right to interfere. grams, however, were not allo- tant to keep the pool of professors less further funds can be raised by cated these funds at the end of the $2.4 million for setting up new No one should legislate someone's instructor posts, the shift of most that Trinity has by designating the development office. ability to control theirownlife...At campaign. For a variety of rea- more money for research proj- A problem might arise as sons, primarily the restrictions of the this money to faculty re- Trinity we have resources to help search and support exposes the ects, 'if we have no research, we earl y as the 1990-1991 school year students. It's the children who attached to some gifts, overall will lose the best [professors] ... due to a shortage of professors in academic program funding college's dilemma: Should Trin- have no support system, such as ity enhance its reputation first in research is more important right certain areas if the class of 1992 those on Broad Street, that we dropped 5.1% while allocation now," she says. decides to pursue minors in fields for new faculty positions fell the eyes of the students and par- want to benefit. The time has ents or through the academic Of the seven faculty posi- of study that have several required come for state and federal inter- 6.75%. Only funds for faculty tions funded by the capital cam- courses, said Colin. research and support rose above success of the faculty? Page 6 • The Trinity Tripod 'November 14,1989 Arts The Dada and Surrealist Word-Image new dimensions and meaning to a tempts to recreate an atmosphere The Dada and Surrealist Word on that first moment in the history by trafficing in contradiction and of art where language occupies a absurdity. This undermining of familiar picture. of absurdity, playfulness and sur- Image convention took place in all of the Surrealism drew upon the prise by arranging the themes and Wadsworth Athaneum "critical and catalytic role in vis- ual imagery." arts at this time, including per- liberties the Dada's had taken, titles of the pieces in different Main St., Hartford formance arts, music and writing. and unified the choas under a colored inks and configurations Runs through December 31 While the exhibition explores developments made between 1910 Therefore it was only natural that philosophy that stressed the im- upon the walls. The addition of a language as well as traditional profusion of unadorned, white by Amy Chase Gulden and 1940, the works still have a portance of reaching the subcon- Special to the Tripod very contemporary context. In painting and sculpture fell victim scious landscape of the mind, mannequins, with rearranged fact the questions and ideas raised to the whim and manipulationof expressing its inner workings limbs and missing body parts the free-thinking Dadas. The Dada and Surrealism and addressed by the Dada and through painting and writing. A proves also to distrupt and shock, Word-Image exhibition will be at Surrealist artists have forever A classic Dada piece/ ges- strong emphasis was put upon the as they seem to be watching the the Wadsworth Atheneum until fostered such values and were ture is housed in this exhibit, as poetic, the nature of dreams and viewer look at the pictures. the last day of 1989 and is a must preventing art from advancing. made by the king of Dada him- the creation of images by juxta- Both the Dadas and the Sur- see for all interested in the roots of Dada was an a apocalyptic sort of self, Marcel Duchamp. LHOOQ posing disparate objects and ideas realists were concerned more with contemporary art and even in anti-movement which sought to is quite simply, one giant slap in to create new ones. Here words intellectual appeal, and not aes- advertising. The exhibit focuses avoid analysis and canonization the face of high art. In this work and pictures served to give broader thetic appeal. The exhibition the artist has taken the reproduc- meanings to each other. proves to be no different, as it is tion of an icon, the Mona Lisa, The Atheneum has its own intellectually stimulating but not easily recognized by the general impressive collection of impor- overflowing with beautiful ob- public as one of the greatest por- tant Surrealist works purchased jects. It causes one to consider the traits of all time, and doodled a by Chick Austin, former museum natureof illusion and reality within goatee and moustache upon her director and "founder of Trinity's the context of representation and face, retitling the picture LHOOQ Art History depatment. The col- also realize the importance of and signing it as if it were his lection was literally bought as they words in the creation of visual art. worknowandnotDaVinci's. The came off the easels of Max Ernst, The Wadsworth Atheneum artist even has the gall to then Salvador Dali andDeChirico back is located on Main St. and is open hold this defaced and retitled in the 1930's. These are exhibited Tuesday thru Sunday, 11:00 to masterpiece up as an equally valid 5:00. Admission to the museum piece of art. The letters below can at the end of the formal Word - Image exhibition. and this exhibition is free with be seen as a random gesture , your Trinity ID. some nonsense to retitle this The installation itself at- manipulated famous image, but when sounded out in french, it comes to mean, "she's got a hot To Be Hung In a ass" which, along with the pen- ciled doodles, certainly serves to alter our original perception of Dormitory Room this picture. Here the incorpora- by Brendan Galvin tion of letters has added entire You know that end-of-the-semester dream: you wander corridor to corridor, a Pentagon-sized Choir to Sing Camima Burana maze as empty as your head, known and challenging works as This year's seventy-five tiles clicking off Carolina Burana Handel's Messiah from the 18th member strong Concert Choir will their accusations to your heels Trinity College Concert Choir century and Brahms' Requiem be accompanied by a full orches- while you look for the door to your exam November 17-18 from the 19th century. This year tra of student instrumentalists you didn't study for because 8:15 p.m. however, they have chosen to from the Hartt School of Music. Chapel perform one of the 20th century' s In addition to the orchestra, the you signed up in another dream most prominent and spectacular Concert Choir will be supple- but woke and missed the lectures, choral works. mented by three professional so- always in a field you could care less about. By Kirsten Kowalski Written by German composer loists from the Hartford area. What if you knew that on the night before Arts Center Publicist Carl Orff in 1936, Carmina Barbara Pierce, soprano; Wayne the first day of the semester Burana features not only the Rivera, tenor; and Howard Sprout, every prof you'll ever have powerful full ensemble move- baritone will be featured through- has gone through the same labyrinth, On Friday November 17 and ments it is so well known for, but out the work in various solos. and less lucky than you, Saturday November 18, the Trin- • many melodic lyrical sections and In the last two years the ity College Concert Choir, under solo passages as well. Intensely finally found the room and cracked the book Concert Choir has performed so perfectly bound pages lined with the direction of Associate Profes- powerful sections such as "0 before a completely full house so sor of Music Gerald Moshell, will Fortuna" and "Blanziflor et He- if you are interested in reserving alphabets extinct as great auk tracks presentaperformanceofCwrana lena" are certain to ring through- tickets or would like more infor- sprang to the air like decks of cards Burana in the Trinity College out the chapel while "Floret Silva" mation about the performance, flexed in his thumb and fingers, Chapel at 8 p.m. and "Chume, Chum Geselle Min" please contact the Austin Arts and suddenly a guy in the back row In past years the Concert will gently sound and echo within Center Box Office at 297-2199 as stood and began to sing, Choir has presented such well . the Chapel walls. soon as possible. his Adam's apple working One last note: Carmina Bur- earnestly to show no threat of campus cops ana will not be the final perform- or blackballs trailing him Prof. Hugh Ogden Beads ance of the Trinity College Con- from there to sixty-five cert Choir this semester. On His Poems at Tfrinity Sunday December 10 in conjunc- would make him sit or quit wearing tion with the Chapel Singers the the Dutch-boy haircut of the text choir will perform their annual to the applaused approval of his peers. The entire Trinity community is invited to come program entitled, "A Service of hear Hugh Ogden, an associate professor of English Lessons and Carols" at 5 and7:30 Brendan Galvin will be reading his work tonight at 8 p.m. in celebration of the Christ- p.m. in the Alumni Lounge, Mather Campus Center. at the college read his poetry on November19 at 7 p.m mas season. as part of the'Sunday Evening Event series at the The reading is free and all are welcome to attend. Koeppel Student Center." Among the courses Ogden has taught at Trinity are creative writing, 17th century poetry, Greek literature, and contemporary american poetry. He is Something Special currently teaching a course entitled, "William Blake; 'the Poet as Radical.". - Attention all swingers and hip cats: Born in Eerie, Pa., Ogden holds a bachelor of . arts degree from Haverford College, a master of arts On Thursday November 16 there will be a special memorial . degree from NYU and a doctoral degree from the benefit concert dedicated to the late tenor sax great, Bill University of Michigan. Baron. More than two dozen local musicians will alternate His poetry has been published in 60 periodicals including '-'Yankee" magazine, and the "North Dakota sets in a program of continuous jazz that is scheduled to run Quarterly." He has also completed a book of poems, 7b from 8 to 12 p.m. at the 880 Club, 880 Maple Ave, Hartford Come Back Seeing, and a chapbbok, Windfalls, and (it's in the neighborhood) Suggested donation is $5. Be there is currently working on his second book. or be square. The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 7 Arts Rolling Stones Rock Shea

firstalbulm "What's Your Favor- preparing for the act they were all -By Doug Lloyd- ite Colour?," their energy raged Special to the Tripod there to see. on through other radio hits such as The lights went dim, the "OpenLettertoaLandlord," "Cult audience screamed, and the an- Sunday afternoon, more than of Personality," and the recent Tue 11/14 fifty-thousand civilians and about ticipation hung in the air. The "GlamourBoys." Corey Glover's opening chords of "Start Me Up" Brendan Galvin six hundred of New York's finest gospel-sounding voice poured were on hand to witness a musical rang out to a blazing pyrotechnics over the crowd, and his charac- display, fireworks shooting high FREE sensation at Brooklyn's Shea teristic head tossing and frantic Stadium. Johns and Janes of all above the stadium, and Mick sprints across the stage helped Jagger rocking like he always has A poetry reading by award winning poet shapes, colors, sizes, and dreams win Living Colour some new fans. had one thing in,common that and always will, gyrating, sprint- and author Brendan Galvin. 8:15 p.m. Vernon Reid's guitar was ing up and down the stage, and afternoon. They wanted to see the unquestionably up to par, and at Rolling Stones in their glory, and climbing the set like a wild cat. Alumni Lounge, Mather Campus Center. times it seemed as if the band had The Stones had the audience on the Stones refused to disappoint more energy than the audience. them. their feet and singing, proving The periodic interruptions of their legend status, and refusing As the cars were parked and 747's blasting out of LaGuardia for one moment to let anyone Wed 11/15 the crowds rolled in, an African Airport were a minor annoyance, down. drum band helped set the mood, but once the show was under way, The Sculpture of Brigid Kennedy beating out frenetic rhythms to For the benefit of those sit- they were quickly forgotten. ting in the nosebleed seats, fif- accompany the rhythm of thou- Living Colour also played a fine FREE sands of bodies pouring in through teen foot video monitors had been cover of The Clash's "Should I erected to focus in on Jagger's the gates. As security gaurds Stay or Should I Go?", and they Opening of an exhibition by visiting checked people for bottles in their sweating face and Keith Richards' finished to thunderous applause and Ron Wood's racing fingers. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts Brigid pockets and shirt sellers hocked from the crowd. their wares, the crowd began to Highlights of the show included Kennedy. Open 1 p.m.-5 p.m. daily. gear up for the show that lay ahead. The sun was setting, and the "Mixed Emotions," the current adrenaline was mounting. Stage single from the new "Steel Living Colour came on sec- hands were running out to set the Wheels" album, "Harlem Widener Gallery, Austin Arts. Runs ond, and Vernon Reid and Corey stage, and the audience was pre- Shuffle," "Jumpin' Jack Flash," through December 20. Glover's energy cranked up the paring for the show, sprinting to "Tumblin' Dice," "You Can't adrenaline one more notch. After the concession stands for a beer or Always Get What You Want," opening with the title tune to their four, stretching their legs, and "Dead Flowers," "Gimme Shel- ter," and "Midnight Rambler". Thurs 11/16 "" The band was backed up by two singers with beautiful, operatic Anerca voices, and rocking horn and woodwind sections. Tix: $10; Students & Senior Citizens $8 The lights were incredible - a The Figures of Speech Dance Co. show in themselves - and the periodic fireworks kept the adre- performs a play about the collision of naline pumping. The show stop- per of the night was the classic -cultures that was -inspiredby thfe'-att^bSk "Sympathy for the Devil", which followed a ten minute drum solo and spirit life of the Alaskan Inuit and a blast of the red fireworks Indians. 8 p.m. Goodwin Theater, over the audience on the field. The number started with a spot- Austin Arts. light nailing Mick Jagger high above the staging, and during the tune he ran, sometimes still sing- ing, from one end of the stage to Fri 11/17 & Sat 1.1/18 the other, up the steps, across the upperplarform, downtohugKeith Trinity College Concert Choir Richards, and across to the other Tix: $6; Students & Senior Citizens $4 side. By the end of the tune the audience was all singing the The Concert Choir performs Carl Orffs "WOO WOO "s along with Jagger, and reveling in the magic "Carmina Burana" with guest soloists taking place onstage. No one left disappointed, and orchestra. Conducted by Gerry least of all Jagger's dry cleaner. Moshell, Chairperson of the Music During the show Mick changed Figures of Speech Theater Copmpany willl produce Anerca on Thursday, November 16 in the Goodwil Theater. his clothes almost ten times. Department. 8:15 p.m. Trinity College Anerca: Navigating Through Chapel. Sun 11/19 Cross-Cultural Boundaries Hugh Ogden Poetry Reading duction of "Anerca" by the Fig- acting and poetry. FREE Anerca During theirterm in residence Figures of Speech Theater Com- ures of Speech Theater Company will be coming to Trinity this week at the college the six member Assistant Professor of English Hugh pany ensemble will also be holding a November 16,1989 on their first stop after a very successful European tour. master class in the art of pup- Ogden reads from his own works of petry 8 p.m. peteering. The class will be held Goodwin Theater "Anerca" is a poem/ drama which deals with the nature of on November 18th at 1 p.m. as part of the Koeppel Student Center perception across cultural bounda- Sunday Evening Event Series. ries. Through the visionary weave SPRING BREAK -By Derek Beach- of theatrical mediums including 7 p.m. Koeppel Student Center. Arts Writer puppets, actors, shadows, and 1990 masks, the company tells us the story of a young man's spiritual Individual or student initiation into his culture. He organization needed Mon 11/20 In Eskimo the word "to make becomes fascinated by white cul- poetry" is the word "to breathe;" ture, and what follows is the in- to promote our Spring LaLecon hothare derivatives of anerca— evitable destruction of his own Break trips. Earn FREE the soul, that which is eternal: the culture. breath of life. money, free trips and The award winning Figures A performance in French of the Eugene of Speech Theater has become valuable work -from "Eskimo Realities" by renowned for its ability to break experience. APPLY Ionesco's play by the Theater Company Edmund Carpenter from theatrical traditions and explore new mediums. In their NOW!! Call Inter- of Claude Beauclair. 8 p.m. Washington Hailed by critics with such productions they combine such Campus Programs: 1- words as "visually stunning," diverse elements as Japanese Room, Mather. "quietly spellbinding presenta- bunraka puppetry with classical 800-327-6013 tion," and "world class," the pro- Page 8 • The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 Features

Place Stamp Here The Biker Chick Steve Safran M.G. Blackburn 1. Never eat anything blue. 4. The more syllables a food has, car in the Evil Kenieval Com- Blue is a great color, hey its even the better it tastes. memorative Mud Bog Champi- a great feeling but blue does not a Come on lets get serious. Which onship by eating all of your brussel Borderline food make. Sure, sure, blue Ital- would you rather have...kale or a sprouts? Remember eating ian ice and blueberries are blue, kitkat? Leeks or licorice? Beets brussel sprout and peanut butter and they taste good but they are or bonkers? I thought so. sandwiches for weeks afterwards? exceptions to the rule. A\id about Food doesn't make a very good Blasphemy those blue tortilla chips that are 5. Never eat anything ending in weapon. It can and will be used One of the lesser appreciated prophets was Sid of Galilee, getting hip with the health food the word "loaf," "casserole," or against you at a later date so be- who documented the more mundane aspects of life during crowd... one must ask oneself the "surprise." fore you lie, think again. what was later referred to as Biblical times. When Sid heard important question, "Would this Can you say "LEFTOVERS" boys that the Bible was being revamped following the blockbuster taste the same if it was yellow?" and girls? Sound the warning bell 8. The more you uncover, un- If the answer is yes, then why for any dishes that end like this for wrap, untie etc.... the better. sell-out of its first edition, he rushed to his publishers with his bother? contribution. Unfortunately, Sid missed the deadline for the these suffixes indeed Good things come in heavily connote,"THE MATERIALS wrapped ornate packages. Fruit , new version and his work was lost to history, a fact which many 2. No "health food." USED TO CREATE THIS is sort of a good example of this Biblical scholars have deemed "just as well." Anything that has health as it's TASTY ITEM ARE SO HOR- rule. You know, "Nature's Professor Shlomo Bergberg, a noted authority on ancient main virtue probably doesn'ttaste RID THAT THEY MUST RE- candy?" Candy is even a better manuscripts, uponhearing of the discovery commented: "And?" too good. Just think about it. Oat MAIN ANONYMOUS." example, however. The more Bergberg has obviously missed out on the importance of bran? Ugh. Eat a,cookie instead, silvery foil and rainbow colored the works of Sid. Here, for the benefit of education and at least you know it will taste 6. Get to know your food. shrink wrapped layers you must religions everywhere is a particularly characteristic excerpt good. Play with it. Talk to it. Ask it go through to get to the center of from the Book of Merriments, as written by Sid of Galilee: what itlikes, where it's from, who a sumptious little morsel, the bet- 3. Never eat anything that its friends are. If people just ter it tastes. Now if they could CHAPTER 12; NO, I MEAN CHAPTER 11: moves. stopped long enough to commu- only combine fruit and shrink nicate with their food there would wrap... ,. : And it came to pass that a festival was hence to be thrown Food should not move and that is at my house following' the big victory against Jerusalem State. be less misunderstandings of the all there is to it. This includes digestive type. Really. 9. Brown food is good food. And lo, there was much preparation for the forthcoming feast goldfish, small children and that Ever notice that almost all of the and my wife did bring many things to our house from the old time favorite jello. Yeah, so 7. If it ain't good, don't lie and best food out their is brown? Coke, market: what if Cosby endorses it. That's say it is. fried rice, pretzels, And she did bring oxen, venison, herds of geese and wine supposed to make it wholesome, Lying about food can and will coffee...CHOCOLATE...all have in jugs numbering seven. right? WRONG. Old jello never come back to haunt you at a later one thing in common—color. Is And I called unto my wife: "Oh, wife, you call these party dies, it just appears in your night- date. Remember the time you this a coincidence? 1 think not! snacks? Where art the chips? Retumeth you now with thine mares. So fork it. If it responds, tried to impress your mom into d tothe.market. But leave hither the wine." For I was not JUST SAY NO!!! allowing you to drive the family 10. Don't eat tofu. na as my. wife did .think an.dnee.deth I to get buzzed: • Need I say more? Now my wife did return hence with goods of all make: she did bring cheese popcorn, Combos, and bags oi fortilla Calvin & H&bbes By Bill Wattei-son chips numbering three and twenty. And my wife did look unto me and sayeth: W SUSIE. VW D\D YOU /•IT APPEARS TOB E "Sid, here art the snacks. You cooketh the Chex party BRING FOP. LUNCH tOOM-j ClSAf. BUTTS IN A GALLSTONE mix, for I am tired and vexed following the day at the market. • A SWISS CHEESE SAUCE. Lo, I do slave over a hot brick for you day upon day, and doeth W KETOWP WAT GKJSS 5MWWCH TWNS YOU you little whenst thou comest home from work except floppeth BRCUSW. thixieaelf on the couch and.pointeth your remote control at the ngiglib'ors.'"-"*-, •>..•' • "'.1 '-Xrtd I cooked the mix verrily and it was good.. And it was at that time that the hour of the party was nigh. And nobody did show for an hour, for they felt it fashionable. Now Dennisheth of Baltazar arrived first and did enquire of me "Lo, Sid, where art the babes?" And I replied unto Baltazar "Relax, for they shall be here WEE. SUPPOSED ARE NOV) ALL R\6«? I TOV.0 THE TEACHER I HAP TO BE NT SCHOOL! WHAT'S THE MATTER.? TO <» TO THE BATHROOtf. on high and there shall be much rejoicing, especially if you do WH ARE SCW CALUHG? QUICK, WHAT'S llt-7? your neat party gags involving the sheep." And Baltazar did put a punchbowl on his head and giggled uncontrollably henceforth. Then the following did arrive in alphabetical order: Phil of Sharon, Susan of Negev, Joey of Caanan, Rebecca of Bogrot and Heather of Brooklyn. And they did look unto the party and say: "Lo, where art the beverages for we are now hot and could use an almighty thirst quencher." And my wife did bring the wine and poureth she the wine unto my guests. Then WAT AREiW MM* IT'S SAD HCW SOME PEOPLE •poureth again she the wine, this time in cups which she gave \Oi% QMNG TO BE f CANT HANDLE A UTTLE ., unto the guests andall agreed that this was much tidier. And LATE FOR SCHOOL I 1ARIET1 .it. we gave thank&fbrCthe)vine for the guests did agree that it was a fine vintage. ^Actually,, it was a cheap" wine, from Ernest and Julio of Napa, but I did switch the labels and the guests noticed not. And the rest of the people did arrive and gave unto me their coats which I placed unto the bed. And there was much merriment, for Baltazar did tell dirty jokes unto the people and was flogged by the elders, for he was a bit of a chowderhead. And Susan and Joey, Heather and Baltazar and Rebecca and Phil did pair off and seeketh out spaces in my house for to make mirth. And my wife did see them doing so and vexed was she yet again, for we had made mirth not since years numbering five and twenty. So my wife did kick them out, shouting: "Hasten, ye generation of vipers! Vengance is mine, and there shall be pain and suffering and gnashing of teeth unto your family!"- And my guests did call unto my wife, as they departed, "Hey, lighten up, Toots!" And we cleaned the house anon. And my wife did leave me on the following day, for a cabinet maker. And I looked and saw that it was good and had unto myself a brewski. Printed by Permission of The Hartford Courant. The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 9 Features The "Pluses" of Being a Pet Owner Everybody should have a pet. in our home, the odds are approxi- off with a blowtorch. ments, Mike and Sandy and their base this statement on a parrot I And I'm not saying this just be- mately 49 to 1 against your hav- cause the American Pet Council So anyway, Mike and Sandy guests stared at this apparition, knew named Charles who be- ing it on our Oriental rug. The had two visitors who wore expen- then Mike, a big, strong, highly longed to a couple named Ed and gave me a helicopter. I'm also odds against your having FOUR saying it because my family has sive, brand-new, down-filled authoritative guy, strode angrily Ginny. Charles had an IQ of 260 random attacks on this rug are parkas, which somehow got left into the room and slammed the and figured out early in his life always owned pets, and without more than FIVE MILLION TO them, our lives would not be nearly in a closed room with Mousse. door. He was in there for several that if he talked to people, they'd ONE. So we had to minutes, then emerged get close enough so that he could so rich in—call me sentimental, conclude that it was but this is how I feel—dirt. looking very serious. bite them. He especially liked to done on purpose. The The down clot stood bite Ed, whom Charles wanted to Pets are natures way of re- rug appeared to have behind him, wagging minding us that, in the incredibly drive out of the marriage so he been visited by a group its tail cheerfully. could have Ginny, the house, the complex ecological chain of life, of specially bred, highly "I talked to there is no room for furniture. For American Express card, etc. So in trained Doberman Mousse," Mike said, an effort to improve their rela- example, the only really nice fur- Poopers, but we deter- "and he says he didn't nishing we own is an Oriental rug tionship, Ginny hatched (ha ha!) mined, by interrogating do it." this plan wherein Ed took Charles #hat we bought, with the help of a both dogs, that the en- People often decorator, in a failed attempt to to—I am not making this up— tire massive output was become deranged by Parrot Obedience School. Every become tasteful. This rug is way the work of Zippy. pets. Derangement is too nice for an onion-dip-inten- Saturday morning, Ed and Char- Probably he was trying the only possible ex- les would head off to receive sive household like ours, and we to do the right thing. planation for owning a seriously thought about keeping expert training, and every Satur- Probably, somewhere cat, an animal whose day afternoon Ed would come it in a large safe-deposit box, but in the Cocoa-Puff-sized preferred mode of com- we finally decided, in a moment home with chunks missing from nodule of nerve tissue munication is to sink his arm. Eventually Ginny real- of abandon, to put it on the floor. that serves as his brain, its claws three-quarters We then conducted a comprehen- ized that it was never going to he dimly remembered of an inch into your work, so she got rid of Ed. sive rug-behavior training semi- that The Masters had flesh. God help the cat- I'm kidding, of course. nar for our main dog, Earnest, and told him SOMETHING owner who runs out of our small auxiliary dog, Zippy. ABOUT THE RUG. Nobody would take Ed. Ginny food. It's not uncom- got rid of Charles, who now works "NO!" we told them approxi- Yes! That's it! TO mon to see an elderly THE RUG! as a public-relations adviser to mately 75 times while looking woman sprinting Miss Zsa Zsa Gabor. So now we very stern and pointing at the rug. At least Zippy had through the supermar- see that there are many "pluses" This proven training technique the decency to feel bad ket with one or more to having an "animal friend," caused them to slink around the about what he did, catsclinging, leechlike, which is why you should defi- way dogs do when they feel tre- which is more than you can say When the door was finally opened, to her leg as she tried desperately nitely but a pet. If you act right mendously guilty but have no idea for Mousse, a dog that belonged the visibility in the room had been to reach the pet-food section be- now, we'll also give you a heck of why. Satisfied, we went out to to a couple named Mike and drastically reduced by a raging fore collapsing from blood loss. a deal on a rug. dinner. Sandy. Mousse was a Labrador down storm, at thecenter of which Of course, for sheer hostility ©7959 Tribune Media, Inc. I later figured out, using an retriever, which is a large, enthu- was a large, quivering down clot, in a pet, you can't beat a parrot. I Printed with permission. electronic calculator, that this rug siastic, bulletproof species of dog looking like a huge covers approximately 2 percent made entirely from synthetic mutant duckling, of the total square footage of our materials. This is the kind of dog except that it had house, which means that if you that, if it takes an interest in your Mousse's radiantly (not you PERSONALLY) were personal regions (which, of happy eyes. to have a random diarrhea attack course, it does) you cannot fend it For several mo- Dynamite... delivers a real one-two punch. -Los Angeles Times OKAY, TMS IS VQllfo LAST CBANCWll "Brilliant.... with explosive force" SEND \ OUk BrxD ! 'Or V< % »O -Hollywood Reporter THE 1ST INTERN/. I1. < H I \L BAD POETS CS it FABULOUS GRAND PRIZE: SUNDAY BRUNCH FOR 2 AT CHARLIE'S PLACE IN WEST HARTFORD.

POEMS WILL BE JUDGED ON INHE1RANT BADNESS. WITH BONUS POINTS GOING TO THOSE BAD POETS WHO CAN PROVE THAT TIIE1R BAD POETRY WAS GRADED IN A CLASS. ENTER AS MANY AS YOU LiKE, BUT ENTER BY Bill Cain Ron Link A powerful new drama of survival, learning. SEND YOUR BAD POEM TO THE BAD POETS SOCIETY, and change at an inner city school TRINITY TRIPOD, BOX 1310. NAP THE DAY! East Coast premiere. Now through Dec. 16 call527-5151 i Groups: 525-5601 ROGGI'S GARAGE HartfordStage. 10% Discount to Trinity Students and Faculty with LD.

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EXHIBITIONS and." Watkinsonl' Library, "A" Fioor, Trinity College Library. Through Wednesday, Jan. 31 - Monday through Friday from 8:30 "Pheasants: Splendid Birds of the a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturdays Orient." Audubon Room, Wat- from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. when kinson Library, "A" Floor, Trin- the College is in session. Free What would your first action as Homecoming Queen be? ity College Library. Monday admission. Questions by John Claud Photos by Sue Muik through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Saturdays from9:30 Wednesday,' Nov. 15 through a.m. to 4:30 p.m. when the Col- Wednesday, Dec. 20 - Sculpture lege is in session. Free admission. by Trinity College Visiting As- sistant Professor of Fine Arts Through Wednesday, Jan. 31 - Brigid Kennedy. Widener Gal- "Maps and Images of New Zeal- lery, Austin Arts Center. 1 p.m. to

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1982

The beginning of the year from a window in the crypt of the came to the Trinity campus with Chapel was stolen. The panel was anumberof changes. The Black a gift from the architect of the Cultural Center, located on Ver- Chapel Henry Wright. non Street between Alpha Chi The year 1982 wasn't a good Rho and North Campus, was one for the students, either. The renamed the UMOJA House, Counseling Service reported that from the Swahili word meaning the number of students with psy- unity. Also, plans were scrapped chotic disorders was the highest to refurbish a dilapated house in the seven year history of the next to Buildings and Grounds Service. College Counselor on New Britain Avenue. George Higgins suggested that Another fledgling idea drinking was now being misused which took shape in 1982 is as a method of escaping tension. A.S.I.A. (Asian Students Inter- He called it "self-medication to national Organization) Origi- remedy anxiety." nally there were 31 members in Food service came under the organization, which spon- scrutiny at Trinity. Student sored lectures and held fundrais - Government had been looking for ers to promote the Asian com- a new food service operation, and munity. in the spring it endorsed the Mar- The controversy of the win- riot corporation, citing its supe- ter was the bookstore. Many rior management. The motion to students claimed that Follett's change the food service corpora- bookstore was deliberately tion passed unanimously, over the overcharging the Trinity com- objections of the Tripod, which munity. A February 9 editorial supported SAGA in a March 9 blasted the store, and a column editorial. called "Cave Confessions" However, SAGA was tapped made a brief run in which stu- by the administration, who de- dents revealed their own horror •! • cided to remain with the present Then Vice President George Bush jogs around the Trinity track during a visit in October, 1982. stories about the Bookstore. food service system. Delta Phi system, which is also banning usage of alcohol by stu- The SGA formed a Book- track. The Budget was approved for known as St. Elmo's. College dents underage 18. After 25 meetings, a Fac- store Committee to deal with the 1982-83 academic year. An President Mark Henderson cited After Dark was formed in the the charges. The manager of ulty Committee unaminously increase in fees made tuition, "the good reputation Delta Phi beginning of 1982 and by the end recommended the abolition of the store held a question and room, board, and fees cost stu- had here at Trinity and has nation- of the year had managed to per- answer session with irate stu- dents $10,200. ally" as one of the reasons for the the fraternities on campus. The form over 10 concerts. committee urged an immediate dents.. Ultimately-the students A new fraternity was ap- acceptance of the fraternity. and the SGA were pacified. Among the guests to the Trin- suspension of pledging to phase proved by the SGA in the spring. The drinking age was low- ity campus were Ralph Nader, The chapel celebrated its Alpha Beta Gamma awaited and out fraternities. The Board of ered to 18 in May of 1982. George McGovern, and George Fellows agreed with the rec- 50th anniversary with a cere- finally received entrance into the Administrators foresaw a signifi- mony. The Chapel's birthday Bush. The first two men came to ommendations made, although fraternity system. Later in the cant drop in drinking on the Trin- campus to speak, while Bush was marked by a theft. A panel year they were accepted into the ity campus. A new alcohol policy the Dean of Students office merely jogged around the Trinity remained cautious. 1983 Theissue of fraternities and discriminatory actions of the col- for a stronger IFC to secure a solid racial prejudice dominated the lege. The two hour sit-in pro- were required to achieve at least a reasons for the change. Tripod's news of 1983. place for fraternities on campus. C- to receive credit in a class The head of the women's tested the dismissal of a black Tuition soared $ 105 0 to bring- The Ogilby dormitory professor, Dr. Johnetta Richards, within a major. Students also had center resigned in October as a the total cost over $11,000 for a to take at minimum four credits result of her financial grum- came under fire by the admini- as well as the failure of Trinity to year. The new, budget was "a stration for its policy of being attract and retain black faculty. per semester. The new changes blings. Patricia Miller cited all male. Ogilby was not in- careful balancing of priorities," were made, according to Dean her displeasure over a lack of a This was not the first such according to treasurer Robert Winer, to ensure that a low grade volved in the housing lottery , expression of outrage about the full-time director and her own which some faculty and admin- Pedemonti. The computer and point average would lead to pro-' part-time status as reasons for insensitivity of the school. Two word processing needs were cited bation before it became a problem istrators felt was in violation of incidents the year before led to the her departure. Title IX, as aihajor cause of the rise of the at graduation. extension of Awareness Day to a budget. SGA decided to defer The: administrators at- week. Also, Trinity entered a A new Minority Affairs some of its duties. After the tempted to change the proce- The administration finally Advisor, also known as a Umoja fall Open Period, SGA created joint investigation with 10 other took a stand on the fraternity issue dure regarding Ogilby by mak- schools to address the issue of House Coordinator, was named the Trinity College Activities ing one-third of the building in April. President English, stat- in the fall. Deborah Mohammed Council (TCAC). The ten racism on campus. ing that "they are not very large open for the housing lottery. It Two more investigations was named to the new post and member board consisted of met with a great deal of criti- • on campus," decided to keep fra- promised to work hard to allevi- were made in the spring regarding ternities on campus. However, he representatives from each class, cism before it was finally im- the fraternity situation. Thelnter- ateracism at Trinity. She saw "no the RA/RC, IFC, SGA, and a plemented as a compromise decreed that organizations must short term solution to the racial Fraternity Council issued a state- . henceforth become .co-educa- Cultural and at-large member. measure. : ment explaining the perceived role problem at Trinity or anywhere TCAC was charged with plan- tional. English stated that if the else." •-••.:-• Forty students staged a of fraternities and sororities. It administrators do their jobs, the ning various social activities march into Vice President Tom stressed higher community serv- scope of fraternity life will de- The Performance Pass sys- around campus. Smith's office to protest the ice participation as well as a need crease by "provide more alternate tem also made its debut in the fall. The Trinity Observer pub- social programs." Students were given this pass as a lished its first issue in 1983, result of a $10 addition to the The "fledging conservative Many organizations felt that Student Activities Fee. paper" sought to convince co-education would destroy what A preliminary search into a they had built up, Chandlee others of their views, accord- new school song replacing ing to Editor-in-Chief Michael Jackson, a member of Kappa '"Neath the Elms" began and Kappa Gamma, "doubted that the Duffy '83. The paper prom- young sorority could stay to- ended in the month of September. ised at least a monthly publish- gether." According to the September 13 ing to express their ideas. issue, "One of the reasons for the Anotherproblems brought The final story of the spring I proposed] switch arises from the concerned the formation of yet to light in the end of the year is fact that Trinity no longer pos- sexual harrassment. The Tri- another fraternity. A new group sesses elms on the quad, but rather affiliated with Sigma Nu won pod published a two-part se- ashes." The idea never actually ries examining the breaches of recognition by the SGA by an became formalized. overwhelming vote. However, decorum on campus regarding the alumni as well as the admini- Plans were put in place to men and women. The articles stration questioned the conflict of change the names of the semes- brought in numerous examples interest with the new co-educa- ters to Fall and Spring. Before to call for a clear sexual har- 1983, the terms were labeled rassment policy. tional rule. Christmas and Trinity, respec- The fall brought with it new tively. Administrators cited the onstruclion of the Cave

5 p.m. daily. Free admission. Moshell. 8:15 p.m. Trinity Col- lege Chapel. General admission: LECTURES $6; students and senior citizens: CAREER COUNSELING $4. Box office: (203) 297-2199. Tuesday, Nov. 14-"Strong Spirit, Good Medicine: Mythological STUDENTS OF COLOR READINGS Foundations of Folk Healing in West Africa" by Trinity College Come to an informal Career Counseling Roundtable with five Trinity graduates to Wednesday, Nov. 15 - Poetry Associate Professor of Religion discuss issues related to the assessment and choice of careers and work reading by award-winning poet Leslie Desmangles. 12nooruJ.L. environments after graduation. - What comprises an organization's "culture"? How Brendan Galvin, whose books of Goodwin Theatre, Austin Arts poetry include "Winter Oysters" Center. Fourth in the annual Town/ do you know which "culture" will match your needs? How do you evaluate and "Atlantic Flyway." 8:15 p.m. Gown Forum lecture series titled professional and personal growth opportunities? What do training programs offer? Alumni Lounge. Mather Hall. "Mythology Li ves!" Registration Sposored by the Trinity College for the series of four lectures is Alumni/ae attending: Poetry Center. Free admission. $35 which includes lunch. Indi- Don Jackson '83 Underwriter, The Travelers vidual tickets will be available at Peter Borges '80 Senior V.P., Oakleaf Development Corp. GENERAL the door for $ 10. For i nf ormation, call (203) 297-2092. Regina Moore Craft '86 Social Worker, City of Hartford (formerly The Department of Modem Lan- ' with Phoenix Mutual) guage would like to express its Wednesday, Nov. 15 - "Women Tony Craft '83 Bond Representative, Aetna gratitude to all those who have contributed to the success of "Les and Systems of Exchange in Deborah Young 77 Anchor Reporter, WTIC AM/FM Chaucer's Canterbury Tales" by Sans Jupons" on October 4th. A Sheila Fisher, Assistant Professor Tuesday, November 14 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. special thanks goes to the Theater of English at Trinity College. 4 Department for its financialsup - p.m. Rittenburg Lounge, Mather Alumni Lounge port as well as its technical exper- Hall. Free admission. Faculty Refreshments Served tise. Lunch Series. SPONSORED BY THE CAREER COUNSELING OFFICE PERSONALS Thursday, Nov. 16 - "Model sion. The lecture is free and the public ance in French of Eugene Thanks for comin' out. See ya Women in 19th Century China" is invited. Ionesco's play, "La Lecon," by next fall Officer Denious. by Michael Lestz, Associate Pro- Monday, Nov. 20 - "The Case for the Theater Company of Claude . fessor of History at Trinity Col- St. Peter in Rome: Roman Ar- THEATER Beauclair. 8 p.m. Washington Congratulations Trinity Men's lege. 12:15 p.m. Women's Cen- chaeology and Early Christian Room, Mather Hall. Free admis- Soccer, the Tripod would not be ter, Mather Hall. Free admission. Art" by Margaret Finch of the Thursday, Nov. 16 - Figure of sion. Sponsored by Trinity the same without you. Knowwhat Lunch Series sponsored by Trin- University of Hartford. 8:15 p.m. Speech Theatre Co. performs College's modern languages I'm sayin', WORD! ity Women's Center and the fac- McCook Auditorium. Free admis- " Anerca," inspired by the artwork department, department of thea- ulty grants office at Trinity. sion. Sposored by the Hartford and spirit life of the Alaskan Inuit ter and dance, and Austin Arts Society of the Archaeological Indians. The performance com- Center. Monday, Nov. 20 - "Wall Street Institute of America in conjunc- bines actors, dance, shdow thea- THINK SPRING tion with the Trinity College clas- MUSIC and the Public Interest" by Pro- ter and bunraka-style puppets in a Outgoing? Well organized? fessor Samuel L. Hayes III, who sics department. play about the collision of cul- holds the Jacob H. Schiff Chair in tures. 8 p.m. J.L. Goodwin The- Friday, Nov. 17 and Saturday, Promote and Escort our Investment Banking at Harvard Thursday, Nov. 30 - "Intellectual atre, Austin Arts Center. General Nov. 18 - "Carl Orff's "Carmina FLORIDA SPRING BREAK Business School. The annual Crisis in Modern China," by Pro- admission: $10; students and Burana," perfomed by the Trinity trip'.' '" ' George M. Ferris Lecture in Cor- fessor Perry Link, Professor of senior citizens: $5, Box office: College Concert Choir with guest poration Finance and Investments. Chinese, Princeton University and (203) 297-2199. soloists and orchestra. Conducted GOOD PA YAJND FUN! 8 p.m. J.L. Goodwin Theatre, former Director of CSCPRC. by Trinity College Associate Call Campus Marketing at Austin Arts Center. Free admis- Seabury 9-17,1 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 20 - A perform- Professor of Music Gerald 1-800-423-5264. File Neui Open... With Macintosh Close you can even do this: Macmtoslf computers have always been easy to use. But they've never been this easy to own. Presenting The Macintosh Sale. Through January 31, you can save hundreds of dollars on a variety of Apple* Macintosh computers and peripherals. ' IJ •,.,,§, Soncwthere'snoreasontosettlefbranordinaiyPClWith'Ihe .'/>•£ Macintosh Sale, you can wind up with much more of a computer. ^ Without spending a lot more money.

Tile Macintosh Sale. Nowthroughjanuary31. Computing Center n Jacobs life Science Center Page 14 * The Trinity Tripod 'November 14,1989 World & Nation Communities Can Canvass Stem Gang Violence Patty Pierson feeling of freedom, and a sense of Gang violence is a problem power at having defied the sys- that cannot be stopped at any one tem. Once a gang like this is "Nobody intends to -ByRobertP.Kinman- root. Arresting the mernbers of chunks of plaster from the Wall established, it prowls the schools, erect a wall," said German Woiid & Nation Writer one gang will simply lead to a war as one would take marble off pressuring younger kids to join or Democratic Republic (DDR) over which gang gets their terri- the Acropolis. Many of us wish On the 11 O'Clock news one become "uncool", or in some cases leader Walter Ulbrichtin June, tory. Does the solution lie in the we were there to help them. night, I heard that police in Hart- face physical persuasion. hands of Connecticut citizens who 1961. Yet build a wall they ford had arrested a 14-year-old Such a gang needs territory, did, when on August 13 of Although the East possess firearms? After all, if the German - Czechoslovak for murder and charged him as an and thus the leader maps out the gangs have firearms, why not the that year East and West Berlin adult. In Bridgeport last week a area that "belongs" to his gang. became divided by more than border has also been opened, citizens, and why should the citi- the crumbling of the 29-mile shootout between two gangs re- This is where territorial disputes zens not have full freedom to use ideological and economic sulted in the death of a 16-year- come in, and violence follows. barriers as the Berlin Wall wall between the two Berlins them, like Charles Branson in old and almost killed an entire Other things that set off gang war Death Wish IV ? The answer to stretched across the Mitte and has garnered the most family whose house was caught attention. As tangible include a member of one gang this lies in the ancient adage that Kreuzberg, Neukolln and in the crossfire. Why are teens switching to another, disputes over evidence of Communist committing serious crimes such reads: two wrongs do not make a Treptow districts. Since then, which gang "gets" certain girls, right. scores have lost their lives oppression, the Berlin Wall as these, and being sentenced as or destruction of one gang's prop- stood as a universal symbol of adults? Furthermore, what back- erty, whether intentional or not, Consider: one out of every attempting to cross from the two homes in Hartford contains a Soviet-occupied sector,, of the physically restrictive ground do all of these kids come (by anyone - it need not be a power of the Soviet from, such that they have no re- member of some other gang. This firearm. One out of every two Berlin into West German . homes in Hartford i&NOT victim- territory, many pummeled by government. Atthe same time, spect for the law? is an excuse for the gang whose the Wall communicated to the property was damaged to wage ized by gang violence. Further, military patrolmen before ever The average gang starts with these firearms do not harm only exiting the DDR. Through the world the inherent weakness the individual. Something or war on anyone they want. of a regime that governs gang members - they can and have years, the cement.and barbed someone persuades a child that Then the role of weaponry killed innocents, in particular wire VV'all has remained a bitter without widespread citizen the streets are more fun or more comes into play. How do gangs support - a government that is young children. Beyond this, if a realiiy to both those contained, profitable than school, such as the acquire the high firepower they homeowner shoots a gang mem- within it and those on its wary of allowing its populace "hey, kid, sell this to your friends have? In some cases they pay to go where it pleases, for fear and you can make more money ber, particularly the leader, who is periphery. adults, often dealers, to obtain to say that the gang will riot return that some might never return. than you will ever need" drug weapons through their connec- Upon leaving his post, As West German President dealer. In any case, once the teen sometime later, and. assault the tions. In other cases, gangs steal home, punching it full of bullet ex-East German leader Erich Richard von Weizsaecker is out of the school system, his the guns themselves. Ultimately, Honnecker attested that the observed, "The walL.f emains close friends will ask him what is holes or burning it to (he ground? the destructive strength of a given These are, of course, exaggerated Berlin Wall would remain a memorial to inhumanity." going on. If the gang leader-to-be gang enhances its feelings of free- standing for 50, 100, or even is persuasive, then his friends will models, but the potential for retri- Yet the destruction of dom and power, and thus enables 150 years. Yet in the three join up to obtain easy money, the the gang to recruit new members. bution is high. Thus, the solution weeks since Honnecker's the wall should not be viewed to gang violence is not more vio- f n as.ajd.dto.ry.of D-emocracy over lence. • , • . fflSS^ ^ig. <$9Jl. and. ;the; Communism, for after the Education, or more properly ascent of new leader Egon weekend's revelry ended it Democratic Stirrings the lack of it, is a major factor in Krenz, East Germans have was evident that only the formation of gangs. The leader experienced the rapid approximately two percent of Communist Governments on Alert quits school, his friends follow, figura tive—and finally literal the East German population and then they draw more kids out — decay of this massive -By Derek Beach- had emigrated to the West, far thought that the Soviet Union of school. To insure that these monument to Communist fewer than authorities had Special to the Tripod teenagers stay in school and 6ff folly. The tide of reform began would send in tanks to stifle the expected. It is clear that some In the past months there have protests.' Something has hap- the streets will take more than with the lessening of travel East Germans want to push current taxpayers are willing to restrictions, followed by been very expiring developements pened. for reform within the system, in Eastern Europe: several months Put simply Gorbachev , give, as many have not seen "the modifications of:" the visa and not abolish the their old big picture." Today, taxpayers in application'': : ' process. ago-Poland elected a non-com- through Glasnost and Per- way of life, and this is the spirit munist goverment,; last month estroika, has allowed such changes every state oppose further taxes Surprisingly, these landmark in which we should support because thay think most of that decisions culminated in last Hungary declared itself a repub- to occur, not only in mother Rus- their efforts. Change, not lic, and three weeks ago East sia, but in the "buffer zone" be- money goes to the Department of Thursday's announcement of revolution is crucial to their German leader Honnecker was tween the East and the West. But Defense, or some other area that the suspension of emigration continued success. forced to resign. Most impor- why should the Soviet Union al- does not need further supplemen- restrictions for DDR citizens, tation (We have enough firepower NpwthattheBerlinWall tantly, last Thursday East Ger- low this? as well as the opening of five many opened its borders. What is Because revolution was to destroy the world 40 times. gates along the Berlin Wall. — this symbol of oppression happening? Why has the Soviet Come on now, is that not — is destroyed, the mindset bound to happen. It was only As a result, for the first time in Union allowed this to happen, and suppressed in '56 and '68, and the enough?). Once the citizenry sees over 20 years we observers that created this wall can be will the reforms continue? that its tax dollars can be used to tempered. When Robert Burns problems were not eliminated. have been ahead of the The term "puppet state" was The reforms that we are seeing improve the community and our encyclopedias, as we watch observed that "Man's educational system, it will become inhumanity to man makes coined to describe Eastern Eu- now represent last-ditch efforts to Berliners from both nations stave off the inevitable revolts. a little looser with its wallet. countless thousands mourn," rope. SinceWorldWarII Eastern move freely through the European nations have been po- But will the reform movements Support of education oh not a Brandenburg gate and . how little he anticipated what litical andeconomic thralls to their be successful? state, but a national scope will Checkpoint Charlie, removing man's sympathy can do. huge eastern neighbor and leader, Last spring the democracy make dropouts less likely, kids the Soyiet Union. Expressive of movements in China were will resist gangs more strongly, this, uprisings, such as those in bloodily suppressed by conserva- and the problem of gang violence Budapest in 1956 and Prague in tives. Eastern Europe and the will shrink. Yet, realistically The Writing Center 1968, were ruthlessly put down Soviet Union are very different speaking, this problem will never by Communist tanks. from China, but blacklashes re- disappear. The only hinderance Individual Tutoring Available Breaking away from this main possible and even likely, here is the unwillingness of the oppressive past, free elections In the Soviet Union, Gor- communities to help their chil- for Trinity Students were recently held in Poland. Ten bachev has already begun to ap- dren resist this cycle of violence; The writing center will be housed in temporary years ago this would have been an ply the brakes. Last spring he Why, we can never know. quarters this semester while we await the act of rebellion. When Solidarity used gas and tanks against upris- completion of our new facilities first held strikes in 1981 many ings in the Asian republics. This Fall 1989 Afternoon Hours in Goodwin Lounge (Next to Cinestudion) Are you opinionated? Monday - Thursday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Evening Hours in Life Sciences 139 Something on your mind? Monday - Thursday 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. • Write for World & Nation. Drop in or phone for an appointment: 297-2468 Submit articles to Box 1310 The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 15 World & Nation What is to Be Done? Jeff Hawkins & Pat Shannon

The Post Cold-War World: The expansive tendencies." Kennan's that the reforms following the active effort and encouragement nate amount of hunger and home- Need For A New Mr. X. specific geopolitical philosophy death of Chairman Mao Zedong on the part of America to bring lessness, and the disparity between The dizzying pace of reform of containment became the foun- show a great "dynamism, initia- reforms to fruition. This active the rich and the poor only contin- in the Communist World has dation for America's policies tive, and openness". As we have involvement could take many ues to grow. Our ability to solve shaken the foundations of Marx- during the Cold War years. Ken- seen over the summer, China has possible forms; monetary, advi- these and the other problems ism-Leninism and drastically al- nan signed his article only with lost any hint of benevolence that it sory and outward political sup- which grip the nation, is severely tered our conception of the So- the letter "X". With a new world had, and that the statements of port would be most efficacious. hampered by the expanding viet Union; indeed it has made situation at hand, many have Fukuyama are no longer valid. In 1947 Kennan perceived budget deficit. Lawmakers lack many of our fundamental beliefs looked to Fukuyama as a possible The events in China have pain that the most menacing threat to sufficient funds to institute pro- about our position in the world new Mr. X. fully demonstrated that liberal- American liberalism and democ- grams which would help to eradi- obsolete. The seeming end of the Unfortunately the United cate the social failings which they ism has not triumphed, and thus racy was the expansionist ten- face. Cold War and the apparent ideo- States has not found another Mr. by Fukuyama's own definition, dency of the Soviet Union. In logical victory of liberalism over X in Fukuyama. Mr. Fukuyama China has set the machinery of 1989, the threat to America and While Fukuyama's essay has communism has created a need to neglects to include half of the history back into motion. Cer- liberalism comes not from with- intrinsic flaws, his realization that assess and formulate a policy and world's population in his treatise, tainly the exampleof China shows out, but from within. After forty history has changed is of utmost plan of action concerning this new he completely ignores the situ- that the transition from commu- years of Cold War, and a philoso- importance. Kennan's vocabu- world. ation of the Third World. He nism to liberalism, upon which phy of Us versus Them, many lary of containment which has The summer issue of the neo- states simply that, "For our pur- Fukuyama rests his thesis, is by internal problems have been ne- characterized the post-war period conservative quarterly National poses, it matters very little what no means guaranteed. glected and now require our at- needs to be revised. In order to Interest published an article which strange thoughts occur to people Even if history has not come tention. assure an end to the Cold War and to secure an important place in the makes this its thesis: the author, in Albania or Burkina Faso, for to an end, many of Francis Even after the declaration of we are interested in what one could post-Cold War world, the United Francis Fukuyama, asks if man- Fukuyama's points are appropri- "a war on drugs", the plague of States must exercise direct in- kind has reached "The End of in some sense call the common ate. We are at a time where the drugs and drug-related crimes ideological heritage of mankind," volvement not only internation- History?". Fukuyama's essay policies of the original "X" des- remain a crippling factor in most ally but within its pwn borders as quickly became a hot topic in Despite their relative unimpor- perately need to be reassessed, if of the major cities in the United academic circles. This previously tance to Fukuyama, these coun- not completely reworked. The States. Among the leading world well. * ;,-•>:•:•:••• • :;•:••••• unknown academician and dep- tries have as much consciousness aforementioned example of China powers, America has an inordi- uty director of the State as the world in which Fukuyama shows the fragility of the reforms Department's policy planning takes interest. History is still very in the Communist world. staff claims that the general dis- much in motion in these countries The notion of containment integration of the Soviet empire which seem to have little interest which is so central to American is no less than "the triumph of the in the development of a liberal Death Penalty foreign policy has become obso- West." ideology. lete; rather than active contain- Fukuyama's interpretation of Perhaps Fukuyama overlooks ment, a policy of active involve- Is PunishmentTruly an Answer? events occurs in a eloquently ar- the fact that for these people the ment is necessary. 11 gued sixteen-page essay which promise of food and universal em- Since his ascent to power in involved accusations' that racial draws heavily upon the 19th-cen- ployment which Marxism guar- the Soviet Union, Gorbachev has -By Dana Cimilluca- prejudice influences deatti'seft- tury German philosopherG.W.F. antees is far more important than set into motion a series of revolu- Special to the Tripod tences and executions. Consider^ Hegel, and in particular Hegel's the development of a society in tionary reforms which after forty ing even the possibility that such The Phenomenology of the Mind. which the liberal ideal of individ- years of stalemate, would allow Ideologically, the death pen- injustice occurs and the greater In his description of the driving ual freedom flourishes. agreement between the govern- alty is inherently self-contradic- possibility of poor jury selection, forces of history Fukuyama Not only does Fukuyama fail ments of the East and the West. tory. Presumably one of its pri- the risks regarding the improper adopts a Hegelian viewpoint and to successfully include the Third As we have seen, reforms are in mary aims is to demonstrate administration of capital punish- claims that the understanding of World in his discussion, but his no way irreversible, their failure society'scommitmenttothe sanc- ment outweigh its benefits. history requires an understand- writing predates and thus com- would lead to a far more conser- tity of life by imposing the ulti- In 1986 the Supreme Court ing of the conflicts of human pletely misses the massacre in vative rule in the Soviet Union mate penalty upon those who decided that to execute a madman consciousness and ideologies. To Tianamen Square. Throughout and the progress of the past years violate it. However it seems that violates the Eighth Amendment Hegel, and thus Fukuyama, his- the article, Fukuyama holds that would be negated. a bolder display of this commit- to the Constitution which outlaws tory itself has been along struggle although "China could not now The importance of the vic- ment would be to protect the right "cruel and unusual punishment." whose climax will be the realiza- be described in any way as a lib- tory of Perestroika is of vital to life even of those who have The resultof this decision is that a concern not only to the Soviet forfeited it. This theory, articu- previously sane person on death tion of the innate, idea of freedom eral democracy.", it "can no longer row who can prove his insanity in the human mind. act as a beacon for illiberal forces Union but to the United States as lated by profesor George Boyd of Trinity University in Texas in The will be relieved of his death sen- Fukuyama takes his proofs around the world". He contends well. Indeed there needs to be tence and taken presumably to a from the defeat of Totalitarian Christian Century operates on the assumption that there are indeed place where his affliction can be regimes in the 20th century; the dealt with. Not only does this victory of the Western forces and f Jobs in Alaska j Attention: some crimes that warrant the death provide a viable loophole for namely the United States repre- Hiring men and women penalty, but that if society resorts anyone wishing to escape punish- sent forhim the end of the struggle • Summer - year round. GOVERNMENT to capital retribution for these, to ment, but it demonstrates one of of history. "What we may be wit- be consistent it should also em- the many inconsistencies of this CANNERIES, FISHING, SEIZED VEHICLES ploy torture for crimes of a more nessing," he states, "is not just the LOGGING, TOURISM, country's system of capital pun- end of the Cold War, or the pass- moderate nature. ishment, which exemplify the CONSTRUCTION. Up to from $100. Recently the prominent issue ing of a particular period of post- $600 weekly, plus FREE Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, death penalty's illogical nature. war history, but the end of history regarding capital punishment has as such, that is, the end point of room and board. Call now. Chevys. Surplus Buyers mankind's ideological evolution Call refundable. Guide. and the universalization of West- 1 (206) 736-0775, (1) 602-838-8885 ern liberal democracy as the final ext. #760H I E xt. A 8408 PART-TIME form of human government." ^ : Jj The article gained instant clerical positions available popularity; a Washington new- sdealer commented that the sum- Two part-time opennings in downtoan merissueofThe National Interest Hartford at the was "outselling everything, even The Ivy League Spring the pornography." The article in New York Travelers Insurance Company became a instant sensation, partly Hours either 8:00 a.m. to 12 noon or 1-4 p.m. because of Fukuyama's position U54 as policy maker in a State Depart- Qualified upperclassmen are invited to apply for admission to Basic typing (35 words per minute+), math skills, ment think tank. Columbia College as visiting students beginning in January and filing required Possible connections be- 1990. Full access to housing, library resources, and upper divi- Positions in Audtiting Department tween the article and Bush ad- sion courses. For further information and an application, write ministration policies have raised Work for Industry leaders in Connecticut many eyebrows in Washington. or call: In 1947, George Kennan, the Columbia College Admissions Office These posts start IMMEDIATELY founding director of the policy- 212 Hamilton Hall Accesible to buslines - Offering between planning staff, wrote an article in New York, New York 10027 $7-$8/hr. . another academic quarterly, For- (212) 854-2522 e'8i Affairs. His article outlined Call 954-7563 to schedule an intervieew a policy stressing the need for "a Application deadline: December IS, 1989 long-term, patient but firm and THE TRAVELERS vigilant containment of Russian Equal Opportunity Employer Page 1« • The Trinity Tripod 'November 14,1989 World & Nation Statistics Cast Harsh Light on Executions Examination of Evidence SuggestsFlaws in Death Penalty with as such by the High Court. In small percentage of the upkeep of "During the twenty-year period outweigh any reason to keep it. from 1945 to 1965 in seven South- the words of Justice Jackson, "The To begin with, the death penalty Death Row, maintenance of the ern states... there has been a sys- very purpose of the Bill of Rights -By Matt Drinkwater simply does not deterpersons from apparatus, and the endless court tematic, differential practice of was to withdraw certain subjects World & NationStqffWriter comiiting serious crimes. Clinton battle and procedures surround- ing the death penalty. Thus, imposing the death penalty on from the vicissitudes of political T. Duffy, former warden of San controversy, to place them beyond Quentin Prison, once said, "I have "getting rid of them" is not a Blacks for rape and, most particu- For thousands of years, man simple, quick, and cheap action larly, when the defendants are the reach of majorities and offi- has been put to death in the name yet to meet the man that let the cials." thought of [execution] stop him thatmanythinkitis. And besides, Black and the victims are White." of justice. Countries around the The most obvious reason for from committing murder." Stud- there were only 1,700 Death Row Plainly, the death penalty shows world — including the United prisoners in 1985; would an in- America has a long way to go in not having a death penalty seems States —have continued to util- ies by professor Thorsten Sellin and the National Academy of flux of less than two thousand ridding itself of racism. to be addressed rarely — simply ize the death penalty as a means of more criminals into "normal" In a Constitutional sense, the that death is irrevocable. If a just punishment for a wide variety Sciences both derived that, statis- tically, the existence of capital prisons all across the country cause existence of the death penalty is mistake is found post-mortem, the of crimes. Many think these prison costs to skyrocket? • quite obviously wrong. The dead person cannot be granted a executions are justified. After all, punishment does notconclusively deter criminals from homicide. Another reason the abolition Eighth Amendment prohibits pardon. At least eight times within these people do not deserve to "cruel and unusual punishment," the last hundred years this situ- live, right? The reason is simple: murderers of capital punishment is bias rarely think twice before pulling When reviewing the Furman v. ation has occurred in the United Wrong. The death penalty is against Blacks and other minori- the trigger. At any rate, there are Georgia case, Justices Marshall States. an anachronism in the most true ties in America. Regardless of his other, more efficacious methods and Brennan came to the conclu- Finally, most people in the sense of the word. Seventy-two crime, a White, middle- or upper- of deterrence possessed by the sion that capital punishment U.S. are of the Judeo-Christian nations have abolished capital class person has little to fear from United States. "serves no purpose that life im- faith. Though the Bible states, punishmentandhoneof these have the threat of execution (Yet an- prisonment could not serve "an eye for an eye," it also states had an increase in the number of Focusing on the death other reason why the death pen- equally well." The criminal is quite clearly, "thou shalt not kill." violent crimes. Clearly, execu- penalty's ability (or lack thereof) alty cannot deter people). From to deter potential criminals, how- 1935 to 1965, 53.6% of all per- removed from society for his It states this without such excep- tions can be replaced by other tions as "unless you kill a mur- forms of rehabilitation and pun- ever, is avoiding the most impor- sons sent to their deaths by the heinous crimes making further derer." Why do so many people ishment without serious side efr tant argument against capital state were Black, even though they retributions unnecessary; he favor a form of punishment that so fects. punishment: the socio-political accounted for around 12% of the should not be killed for vengeful and moral ramifications. First, it total population. Marvin reasons. strongly clashes with their most ', The reasons for the the United Wolfgang states in his book fundamental beliefs? States to follow the example of is wasteful financially. The cost Some think that this issue is Capital Punishment: the Inevita- The time has come for capital these other countries by federally of feeding and boarding criminals not one for the Supreme Court to bility of Caprice and Mistake, punishment to be a thing of the prohibitingcapitalpunishmentfar that would otherwise be killed is a decide. Some ask why "the will of the people," or the Congress, past. As a new millennium ap- cannot decide. The answer is, proaches, let us not forget the simply, that this is a Constitu- lessons we so painfully learned in College Ratings Overrated tional issue and should be dealt this one. resulting in a positive or negative ment and mean grade point aver- -ByBill Ghent- bias. For this year's survey, ques- age should be taken into account. World & NationStaffWriter tionnaires were sent to 3879 col- One must also note that these rat- Support Hunger and lege presidents, academic deans, ings are read by curious high "I find the whole thing de- and admissions officers at 1294 school seniors who have begun pressing. It purports to render the institutions. Yet the majority of the college application process and Homelessness public a service when in fact it is this varied information was used may view these reviews as a de- a fraudulent exercise, which they solely to rate the schools' aca- termin ing factor in deciding which know to be fraudulent but which demic reputations. schools to apply to, and the Awareness Week they continue because it sells a lot President of the American higher a school rates the of magazines." Council on Education Robert better. But higher isn't Atwell leads administrators in always better. It is bad President of Middlebury College their battle against U.S. News . enough that many people Olia Robinson This council represents 1600 col- apply to colleges solely for Were any of you infuriated leges and universities. Referring theirprestigious reputation MATf DILLON or distressed by the recent survey to the college ranking issue as an and not their benefits for of American colleges and univer- "annual travesty," Atwell states," the individual student. KELtff LYNCH sities done by U.S. News and I think that arriving at five criteria This survey provides stu- World Report ? If you were, then for determining institutional qual- dents with yet another you were only one of a long line of ity oversimplifies a very complex smokescreen to cloud the college students and administra- problem. A.C.E. has asked U.S. true pros and cdns of the tors who disagreed with the sur- News to cease and desist, "We've schools which they will vey, not only this year but every asked them in letters and we've choose from. year since the survey began. In met with them and the answer U.S. News' college fact, two years ago several col- comes back in so many words that issue benefits colleges at lege administrators, led by Olin the issue sells magazines," con- the top of its list. Rank can Robinson, were so upset over the cludes Atwell. be important, but if these methods used to determine rank- Regardless of the economic rankings obscure the in- ings that they marched into the incentive, a survey which creates formation provided in the magazine's office to complain to such controversy needs to be issue, then there is some- the writers. reevaluated and redesigned, es- thing wrong. There is little But the complaints contin- pecially when it elicits such strong doubt that the issue also ued when this year's rankings were condemnations, from academi- benefits, appropriately, the released as well, even though the cians themselves. Although this regional colleges and uni- criteria was expanded and the year's survey was better informed, versities that do not enjoy rankings were "more fair." Sen- it still neglects many human as- widespread recognition. ior editor of U S. News and World pects of col lege life which cannot But what about the schools Report Robert Morse said the be expressed in numbers. In that do not reap the bene- rankings were "the most so- addition, themannerin which U S. fits of being in the top five phistiicated thing out there." News weighs the criteria seems of the national categories? Sophisticated or not, the coon- unfair, as less emphasis is placed For all its deficiencies, the troversy surrounding the college on the actual curriculum or aca- survey will reappear next survey issue of U S. News contin- demic qualities of a college by year when the 1990 rank- ues to grow, and for good reason. lumping them into one category. ings are released. Hope- One cause of the controversy This does not allow the specifics fully by then the magazine raised regaiding the rankings is of a college to shine. will have eliminated the the fact that the issue is continu- Though a ranking of every glitches inherent in such a ally one of the biggest sellers of aspect of an institution would be superficial analysis of the the year, always rated in the top extremely difficult, certain advan- strengths and weaknesses three. Another reason for the tages of the individual schools ofournation'scollegesand upheaval is that some issues' could be noted somewhere. universities. The fact that rankings in past years were based Moreover, the only colleges high- rankings mean little in the on information released by 200 lighted in the issue are those in the overall value of a school college presidents from across the top five. Nowhere was a small must be realized; other- nation. Obviously, the method of institution like Trinity profiled. wise, many impressionable receiving data solely from col- Yes, Trinity was ranked 20th, but students selecting a col- lege presidents allows for a if the issue's purpose was to show lege will look to numbers skewed perspective of each the superiority of certain colleges, before they consult the school's strong and weak points, then factors other than endow- facts. The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 17 Sports

iBliiiiiiiii 893 WRTC FM Patrick Keane Presents its Second Maradona maneuvers past in dismembering his foe. Jordan the hero of countless million in four defenders, beats the goal- left college after two three sea- Europe and beyond. After mov- Annual keeper and scores, Jordan receives sons, realizing that amateur com- ing to Naples to play in the Italian the ball at the baseline beats a petition was below him. Jordan, league, Maradona's home in triple-team and slams the ball over the college player of the year in Argentina was fire bombed and SKA-FEST the opposing centers head, his sophomore and junior seasons, he received countless death Gretzky swings from behind the has gone on to unprecedented threats. net and puts the puck past the greatness early in hisprofessional Maradona's style of play have Featuring goalie's blind side; these scenar- career. Jordan has also become a also made him a unique athlete. ios have been repeated what seems figurehead for the grace of bas- Maradona is a purely left-footed to be thousands of times by three ketball and has become the figure player, which is very limiting for of the greatest athletes in sports. for countless endorsement dol- a soccer player, especially at the Bim Skaia Bim In the last ten years these three lars in every form of advertise- international level. In leading his professional athletes have not ment available. country to the 1986 Copa Mun- Britain's Number One only dominated their respective Jordan has not only tripled dial, Maradona was the target of arenas, but they have literally Chicago season ticket holders he brutal attacks by the opposing transcended sport. has also doubled the draw in every countries. In the final game he Potato 5 From his rookie season city that the Bulls visit. Whether was fouled nine time, emphasiz- Wayne Gretzky has reigned su- scoring 63 points in a losing cause ing that every time he has the ball and from Fresno preme in the National Hockey against the Celtics or shooting the opponent want to hurt him. League, winning eight straight jumper to beat the Cavs Jordan Maradona was offered 21 Hart (MVP) awards meanwhile has definitely become money in million dollars to play for a French Let's Go Bowling adding a ninth last season. In the bank. team, but the underground busi- eleven seasons he accomplished One professional sports fig- nessmen of Naples would not what it took the former king of ure that has transcended sport on allow this. Figures state that he The Cave hockey Gordie Howe, five dec- an international level is Argen- has meant $20 billion for the ades to achieve. tina soccer player Diego Mara- Naples economy, not to mention The statistics are only one dona. Maradona, who was re- his importance in the European Friday, Nov. 17 facet of these athletes pure domi- cently named athlete of the dec- Cup. nation of their sport. On being ade in Great Britain has become In rising above sports these traded to Los Angeles a season the new Pele in a sports that needs athletes have meant lucrative ago cries were heard in Alberta the exposure on this continent. rewards fortheirowners and have $5 Bring LD. that will sure to ring for years to Diego too has become an institu- become the heroes of children and come. Edmonton not only dealt tion not only in his home country adults alike in all parts of the Alternative Beverages away the best, most prolific scorer of Argentina, he has also become globe. in the history of the game, they also squandered away countless millions of dollars. Wayne Gretzky is not simply a hockey player, he is an institution, who has captured the hearts of an en-, tire continent. Gretzky has not only shattered every scoring rec- ord in NHL history, he has done the impossible, established a successful hockey team in a most un-hockey hockey area:Los Angeles. Gretzky has simply become, "The Great One." The pure glamor and pres- tige that Gretzky has brought to hockey is tantamount the Michael Jordan's domination of profes- sional basketball. Since his in- ception in the league in 1984, Jordan too has become an institu- tion within his sport. Consecu- tive scoring titles and an MVP award have established Jordan as a great player, but not the best. Mr. Jordan earned deity status after single-handedly brining his team to the doorstep of the NBA finals. Last second buckets against the Knicks and Cavaliers saw many question if Jordan should be in the same league as the rest of the NBA. Jordan and Gretzky have imposed their domination in team ••'• ••'••'••'<*• vs sports, unlike a Mike Tyson who only depends on his own powers mm,

Winter **Special Benefit Performance on Sunday! i A portion of the proceeds will go to The AIDS Project Harlford. I Please join us for a post performance reception. Performance and Sports • I reception is $15. General :: v\::.V^:-: Writers Student/Senior Thursday; Wo* 16 at 8:00 pm For best seats call the Sunday Benefit Saturday, Nov: 18 at 8:00 pm WORKS Box Office at: Needed Box Reserved seating for Sunday Nov. 19 at 7:00 pm (203) 233-8333. all performances. 1310 Page 18 • The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 Sports Men's Hoops Looks to Continue Winning Ways bounding with 12.6 caroms per in the country last season) will freshman paint players will be are sophomores. game. He is also an Division III help balance the team. Trinity 6'6"MarkO'Day (whohas shown Although there will be tough -By Cara Cahalan- Ail-American canidate. Head will be expecting big things form considerable improvement turn- competion for the starters spots, Special to the Tripod coach Stan Ogrodnick will be Matt this year. ing into apleasantsurprise forthe Coach Ogrodnik will be able to looking to Stubbs for leadership The remaining players are al 1 coaching staff) from Wilton, Ct., use alot of players due to their The men's basketball team this year, considering how young extremely close in ability, which 6*8" Pieter Vander Heide from individual specialties and very- will officially open its season on the team is. The second vital will make choosinga starting line- Windam, Ct., and 6'8" Doug close skill capability. November 27lh at 7:30 againts returner will be co-captain Joe up very difficult for Head Coach Rausch (who presently has a slight It looks as if the Bants tough- Westfeild State in Massachussets. Reilly. Reillyisa6'0"juniorwho Ogrodnik and his assistants injury) from Hicksville, Long est opponent will be Williams who Trinity won the ECAC champi- started the last two games and Charles Driscoll and Bob Healy. Island. forced Trinity into three overtimes onships against Rhode Island recieved the most valuable player Players in contention for an off- There will also be three for- in last years semi-final game for College last year and has captured award in the Liberty Bank Clas- guard or small forward spot will mer J.V. players working for ECAC's. Williams will be re- thetitlefourofthelasteightyears. sics tournament in the 88-89 sea- be 5' 11" junior Chris Hinchey, Varsity spots. The trio consist of turning most of its squad and Unfortunately, Trinity lost five son. Coach Ogrodnick predicted 5'10" sophomore Mike Allan, Matt McGowan, Jeramy Lappen, should give Trinity a run for its seniors of last years squad, four of "wearelookingatJoeasthe point 6'2" DeniseMcCoy, 6'2" sopho- and Dave Lillevand, all of whom money. The first home game will whom made up the first seven guard and the teams "QB" on the more Damon Scott and 6'3" so- be Saturday, December 2nd at 8:00. players on the court. floor.". Matt Vaughn is the third phomore MattPerno. The big man However the future is not of the vital trio. Vaughn, a so- position will be again a close battle bleak, Trinity will retain three very phmore smal] forward or off- between a junior and three fresh- Record-Breaking Romp skilled players. The sole return- guard, started seven games last man. The 6'10" junior Antonio Continued from Page 20 Trinity fans have become ing senior, will be Michael Stubbs, season as a freshman. An all Roca from the Canary Islands has Two Tim Jenson '90 field used to the Bantams exciting air a6'8" co-captain andpaintplayer. around player and an excellent showed vast improvement but his goals and rushes by Levine and attack, but the defense turned in Stubbs lead the country in re- three point shooter (ranked fourth competition will be fierce. The Redgate allowed the Bantams to an equally compelling perform- capitalize on all but the last two ance as they terrorized Wesley an's posessions of the first half. A 79- quarterback. yard sprint by a Wesleyan receiver Defensive ends Rob Sick- was the only bright spot for the enger '90 and Jeff Buzzi '90 tossed Cardinals, who trailed 27-7 at the Wesleyan's offensive linemen half. aside in their search for the Ten more points in the sec- Cardinal's Jeff D'Onifrio, who ond half rounded out a season- was forced to throw most of his high 516 yard offensive perform- passes after a hurried three-step ance which combined lethal air drop. Despite his attempts to avoid ' and ground attacks. Todd Levine the Trinity pass rush, D'Onifrio fans were not dissapointed by the was sacked 10 times for a loss of veteran signal caller's 273 yards 87 yards. passing. In the second quarter These sacks, combined with Levine combined with wide re- outstanding pursuit on running ceiver Rocco DeMaio '91, who plays, pushed Wesleyan's total made a spectacular diving grab rushing yardage to negative 67 just shy of the end zone. for the game. The Bantam's ground attack The victory brought the was equally impressive,' Kevin team's record to 7-1, the best RisCassi '92 rushed for a 160 record since 1970 and Coach Don yards, his best game of the season, Miller's tenth straight winning as Trinity ran the ball for 243 season. The Trinity Cheerleaders returned to Jessee Field this year after a season's absence. Photo by Sue Muik yards.

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COLLEGE Only a turkey would pass on High DIVISION I IVY LEAGUE Notre Dame 17 Spirits' Low Prices this Thanksgiving! 28 Harvard 14 Penn State* 14 Colorado 49 Kansas State* jrewn* ' 20 Columbia 14 7 21 UCLA * jfrinceton* 31 Cornell 21 use* 14 Texas Tech 42 SMU* •ennsylvania* 17 Dartmouth 14 14 NFL Clemson 28 South Carolina* 14 Duke 24 YANKEE CONFERENCE North Carolina* 14 Rutgers 21 Temple* NY Giants* 21 Seattle 17 JJConn 24 Rhode Island* 14 14 Michigan State* 31 Northwestern Buffalo 23 New England* 21 JHassachussets* 24 14 20 New Hampshire 21 Louisville 24 Boston College* Philadelphia* 21 Minnesota VUlanova* 35 Boston U. 21 21 17 Nebraska* 21 Oklahoma Chicago* 20 Tampa Bay (James Madison* 24 Northeastern 7 14 17 Pittsburgh* 28 East Carolina Cincinnati* 21 Detroit Delaware* 14 Navy 13 14 17 Oregon* 28 Oregon State Cleveland* 21 Kansas City William & Mary* 35 Richmond 7 14 17 Vanderbilt* 27 Tulane 21 Houston* 20 LA Raiders Virginia 20 Indianapolis* 28 NY Jets 21 OTHERS Maryland* 14 17 :s Michigan 31 LA Rams* 23 Phoenix iHoly Cross 38 Minnesota* 14 20 21 Alabama* 28 Miami 1A Dallas* Lafayette 21 LehighBucknell* * Southern Miss. 14 20 14 Auburn 14 New Orleans 21 Atlanta* Army* 35 Colgate Georgia* 13 16 7 Pittsburgh* San Diego Catawba 24 Lenoir Rhyne* Iowa 24 Purdue* 14 17 17 14 Texas* 31 San Francisco* 23 Green Bay (Murray State* 35 Austin Peay Texas Christian 14 14 Georgia Tech* 24 Stephen F. Austin 31 N.W. Louisiana* Wake Forest 14 14 Illinois* 35 Monriav Night Football Tiffin 14 West Liberty* 13 Indiana 14 Iowa State 24 Oklahoma State 21 Washington* 21 Denver 20 The Trinity Tripod • November 14,1989 • Page 19

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Williams 8-0-0 Trinity 7-1-0 Amherst 6-2-0 Tufts 6-2-0 Hamilton 4-3-0 fERRY MCNAMAJW TODD LEVINE TIM JENSEN DARREN TOTH Colby 4-4(CBB title) Middlebury 2-5-1 Fodtball Results Bowdoin 1-6-1 TRINITY 37 Wesleyan 7 Wesleyan 1-7-0 Williams 17 Amherst 14 Bates 1 -6-0 Tufts 48 Bates 7 Yankee Conference Colby 38 Bowdoin 20 Union 34 Hamilton 0 Maine 6-2-0 Coast Guard 46 Siena 0 New Hampshire 5-2-0 Middlebury 24 Norwich 0 UConn 5-2-0 WPI 35 MIT 10 Villanova 5-2-0 Delaware con Maine 29 Northeastern 26 O u U UConn 38 Boston U 30 Boston U 4-3-0 New Hampshire 25 Rhode Island 0 UMass 2-5-0 Villanova 29 UMass 26 Rhode Island 1-6-0 Delaware 33 Richmond . 17 Richmond 0-8-0 Colonial League Men's X-Country Results SMU Box Holy Cross 3-0-0 1. Mike Joyce 27:52 The Tripod's favorite team, SMU, distinguished Bucknell 3-1-0 2. Kevin Hall 28:44 themselves by actually scoring a touchdown Lehigh 2-2-0 3. Mike Fagan 29:24 against #1 ranked Notre Lafayette 2-2-0 4.Jo.hn Claud 29:37 Dame. Unfortunately the extra point was blocked Colgate 2-3-0 5. Tito Lord 29:55 and returned for 7 of the Irish's 56 points. Fordham 0-4-0 -d

Athlete of the Week The View Specials The College View Come to The View for Dinner! Pitchers of B'usch are only $3 Athlete of the Week is when you order a meal between Terry McNamara. 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Terry's 9 receptions in Monday Night Football the defeat of Wesleyan Free pizza and $3 pitchers of 1 set a new Trinity and Mil's Best from kickoff to ending *",' New England Division 1V.' Sunday Night - Pitchers of I III record of 157 career Milwaukee's Best are onlt $3 between 9 p.m. and closing receptions. I' , , ;'! ^" i !:A W-1 Trinity Pummels Wesleyan 37-7 McNamara, Jenson, Toth Set Records Namara came into the game only on two concecutive plays to set a -By Robert E. Cockburn- six catches short of the Trinity New England Division III record Editor-in-Chief career reception record, nine short of 157 career receptions. of the New England career rec- "I'm sorry he couldn't catch Records were falling at Jessee ord, and eleven shy of the season up with Pat and Tim, but he got Field Saturday like the sky on reception record. McNamara's the career records and that's good Chicken Little. older brothers Pat '78 and Tim enough for me," said McNamara's Trinity's 37-7 dismantling of '84 each caught 67 passes during extatic father. Wesleyan Saturday raised the a single season. Though the accomplishments Bantams record to 7-1, securing With the clock ticking in the of McNamara, Jenson, Toth and second place in the New England fourth quarter, McNamara's fa- Levine, who broke the Trinity Small College Athletic Confer- ther watched nervously from the passing record against Amherst ence. Williams defeated Amherst sideline as his son chased the the week before, were great per- 17-14 at Williamstown to com- career reception record. "I don't sonal stories, several other play- plete the Ephs first undefeated know. If they get the ball to him he ers had outstanding games as the season and clinch the NESCAC can get [the record.] Then he only Bants took the Cardinals to the crown. needs three more for the New cleaners. Three seniors capped their England [career reception]' rec- Trinity scored on their open- final season by setting records. A ord." ing drive and never looked back. 33-yard field goal by Tim Jenson With 7:34 remaining in the After taking possession at '90 in the second quarter broke game, quarterback Todd Levine midfield, quarterback Todd Lev- the school record for points in one '90 connected with McNamara in ine '90, behind his mammoth season by a place kicker. Jenson the Wesleyan end zone for a new offensive line, spearheaded a 7- blew past the previous 49-point Trinity record [155J and the last play, 48-yard drive which culmi- mark, kicking for 13 points on the of the Bants' 37 points. 'Tmjust nated in a 21-yard pass to Steve day and 57 points for the season. so happy for Terry. His brothers Redgate'91. Darren Toth '90 put his name having the record was a big load Please see Record, Page 18 Kevin RisCassi '92 (#29) breaks a Wesleyan tackle. Photo by Robert Z Cockbum in the record books with his out- to bear," the elder McNamara standing play on special teams, exclaimed. setting a new standard for punt The jubilation subsided returns. Passing the season punt quickly as Trinity regained pos- Carrie Pike Places 20th return record of 30, Toth fielded a ession of the ball and McNamara total of 10 kicks for 79 yards. set out to break the New England The final record of the day Tecord. Aftertwoincompletions, was a family affair. Terry Mc- Lev ine found his favorite receiver In NCAA Div. Ill Meet thirty-three women's teams, in- Brandeis broke away from the -By Caroline Bailey- cluding running powerhouses pack early and led the whole way, Sports Writer Smith, Williams, Bates, and Bran- his nearest competitor from Tufts •Receiver Terry McNamara '90 beats the Trinity deis. Aside from the strong gusts a full half-minute behind him the and New England Division III career receiving of wind, the course was flat and whole race. This past Saturday, both the fast except for a mud swamp Mike Joyce '90 and David record with 157 catches. men's and women's cross Coun- covered with shaky plywood Payne '92 led the way for Trinity try teams travelled to Dartmouth, which bounced as the runners for the first mile, but Joyce pulled ! Massachusetts, home of Southern > Place kicker Tim Jenson 90 sets a new Trinity crossed over it. away and Payne had to drop out of Massachusetts university, to run record with 57 points this season After a quick shot at the start the race, still not feeling well after in the NCAA Division III New gun, the women's race was off having been sick for most of the England Regional race which and running at a face pace through past week. Joyce ran a strong Special teams Darren Toth '90 surpassed decides which runners will go on the fields which made up about time of 27:52. Kevin Hall '92 Trinity's record of 30 punt returns in a season to compete at the national level. two thirds of the course. The two came in next with a time of 28:44. The competition consisted of hundred plus runners stretched out Mike Fagan '90 came in at 29:24 into what looked like a long pack followed by John Claud '91 at and parade. 29:37. Tito Lord '90 finished Carrie Pike '93 led Trinity with a time of 29:55. runners the entire race and came The men's team results were in a fantastic twentieth overall. not released in time for Trinity to Claire Summers '92 ran a strong collect them before the long ride race and broke the twenty-two back to Hartford. Brandeis won minute mark with the help of coach the team overall championship. Dave Barry's cheering. She came Overal 1, the teams had a tough in second for Trinity. PamNovak season with injuries. However,: '93, Abby Bordner '93, Laura both teams maintained a high Kearney '90 and Caroline Bailey morale and enjoyed their i mining, '90 all came in during the twenty- first ycai coach Bairy '85 was third minute. very supportive of all the runners, While happy about finishing training them hard and cheering the race, seniors Kearney, Bailey, loudly at l aces aces. and Elizabeth Hines were sad to Next season should piove to finish their last cross country be a good one for both teams, the season at Trinity. The team fin- women having a strong nucleus in ished a respectable nineteenth out Summers, Novak, Bordner, and of thirty-three. the amazing Pike who has given After a rousing cheer of all the lop runners in ihe league a "Psycho Chicken," the men's team urn for their money, while the lined up at the start. Again a quick men's team can build around the start signal starter the race off at a strong nucleus of Hall, Claud, hi 111 kM li I • Lioll ll tl I IhllVllll- I ilILl \\ ll V 111 his III I IIIH HI till si I till Photo by Robert E. Cockburn quick pace. The lead runner from Payne, and Jon Ives '93.

Men's Basketball Preview , Men's X-Country Times .NESCAC, Yankee Conference and Colonial League Final Standings