Tuition Raised $250; Student Strike Threatened; Dean Offers Compromise Boycott Vote Tonight 1 Robertson If Measure Retained To Discuss Student response to a surprise ¥250 tuition increase announce- ment by the College included a mass rally at Williams' Memorial and a Senate resolution to call an all-college meeting to consider Finances a student strike if the measure is not rescinded by this after- noon and a committee formed to review its increase. At a meeting held Friday with The meeting will be held tonight at 10 p.m. in the Washington a representative of the TRIPOD, , Room. A vote will be taken at that time on whether or not to boy- Treasurer and Comptroller J. cott classes, beginning tomorrow. As usual at such meetings, any Kenneth Robertson expressed his student wishing to be heard may address the student body. willingness to meet with duly con- stituted student leaders at any Tension between students and administration was further time to discuss the financial posi- heightened by a misquote in the HARTFORD COURANT of SDS tion and policy of the College. t. President Steven H. Keeney's explanation of the situation to a DEAN OF STUDENTS Roy Heath addresses students assembled The meeting came at the request COURANT reporter, (see letter page 6) of Dean of the College Harold outside Williams Memorial to protest the $250 tuition increase. Dorwart in an effort to provide Gathering at 4 p.m. at the steps channels of communication be- of Williams' Memorial some 350 tween the students and the ad- students demanded that College of- ministration. ficials answer questions about the possibility of conflict of interest This need for communication be- on the part of the trustees, invest- came apparent last week when the ment policies, and student parti- student body and parents were cipation in College decision mak- surprised by President Albert Ja- ing. cobs' letter dated February 1 an- fritiit]) fripob nouncing a tuition increase of $250, Kenneth Robertson, Treasurer effective in September 1968. While of the College, who was known to •x.'-d r-'- .'.:' null £ VOL. LXVI No. 25' TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD FEBRUARY 13. 1IW8 most sources consulted in the ad- • be in his office, refused to re- ministration and faculty expected -. spond to student chants that he . the increase to cover traditional join Dean of Students Roy Heath, biannual salary increases, the stu- and Acting President Harold L. dents were taken wholly unawares. Dorwart in answering questions on Mozzi Wins Election Race; The Friday meeting with Robert- the Williams' steps. son came as the result of a stormy Thursday night at an all College three days of student-faculty re- meeting, which Robertson was also primand of administration tactics unable to attend, Dorwart and As- Stresses 'Community' Ideal and student demands that the need sistant Dean of Students, Leonard for the increase be explicated. R. Tomat each read prepared In a run-off election held Fri- wasn't me," lie explained. During the hour long session, statements and refused to parti- day, the student body elected as Mozzi's goal will be to work figures and budget plans were cipate in open discussion. The its president Leonard P. Mozzi toward establishing; an integrated disclosed which pointed out the statements were termed unsatis- '69. The theme of Mozzi's cam- community. Poor communication, "unavoidable need tor the tuition factory by most students and mem- paign was "community," the need to date, he holds, has prevented 'iucreaste." Robertson explained. bers of the Senate in attendance.. tor mutual openness, and respect realization of this goal. •Nobody Continuing Robertson spoke of They were received with catcalls among the College and all its knows what anybody .else is doing." the "wage-price spiral and the and demands for open discussion. members. says Mozzi. increasing need for faculty raises" After Dorwart and Tomat left Defeating both Theodore F. Cook "Decisions which affect the as determining factors which de- the meeting, Senator Peter Ehren- '09 and Lloyd Kramer '69, Mozzi whole community too often are manded "some added income in berg introduced a motion, which called on the College to assume not made by the whole commun- order to" maintain our present was passed 31-4-1. demanding that the role of " innovator" in Its ity." He cites the tuition in- the Trustees rescind the tuition dealings with students and tlie lo- crease as a prime example. (Continued on Page 3) raise and set up the machinery cal cumnnmity. Experimentation to involve students in its re- :ie maintained is the duty of a consideration. Failure to do so by small college if it is to survive. this afternoon, the motion read, McCarthy Candidacy would result in an all college He has been a strong support- meeting to vote a student strike er of "student power," wliicli tie this evening. equates with student responsibil- ity, and explains that the only way Examined, Supported After two private meetings with students will become responsible Dorwart, newly elected Student is to be given responsibility •'The greatest obstacle to require." "We are'just as re- Body President Leonard P. Moz- Leonard P. Mozzi The iact that both Mozzi and the McCarthy campaign is the feel- sponsible as the Marines for what • (Continued on Page G) Kramer had de-activated their fra- ing that nothing can be clone and is happening in ," he ternities ' disproved ior many the that there are no alternatives," claimed, notion that fraternity block voting claimed Rev. Joseph Duffey, oneof McCarthy, said Cox, is in the Fraternity Council Lacks controlled College politics. several speakers at the open meet- campaign for a just reason—to The final goal of the entire ing to discuss the candidacy of provide the American public with educational community, according Senator Eugene McCarthy, held in an alternative. He has chosen to 'Necessary Formal Order to the newly elected president, the Washington Room Tuesday do this, explained Cox, through would be "to learn to live." Mozzi night. the means of primaries and con- "The presidents informally can't fraternities are not represented criticized the College for failing There is a growing sense ventions. He described McCarthy get much done—they need a for- on this committee. Yet Peet is to make its decisions with this of hopelessness and fatalism as a "peace candidate in the lar- mal structure," according to Harry not optimistic that this Presid- goal in mind. sweeping the country, noted Rev. ger sense of the word." He sees ents' Council might become a uni- Mozzi's campaign started off Duffey. He attributed this "Dr. Peet, as he remarked on the suc- (Continued on page 9) cess of the Presidents'. Council. fied fraternity organization, at a whirlwind pace, with many Strangelove-Complex" to failures The council was formed by the for Theta Xi is very set about CITE members voluntarily can- in poverty programs, civil rights, majority of fraternity presidents what they want to do. TX will vassing the campus for votes, education, and the war in Viet- Social Dorm to take the place of the IFC. not join any council that does not and electioneering for him with nam. Peet, President of Delta Phi, could abolish all Hell Weeks. Peet added various campus leaders, Dr. Harvey Cox, one of the two not comment though on whether the that other fraternity houses do not On the day of the campaign principal speakers and author of. Experiment Presidents' Council will replace take the same positions as ,TX the candidate called off the organ- "The Secular City," spoke out the IFC. in relation to joining a council. ized efforts and insisted that his in support of McCarthy because friends and supporters slow down "not only is he (McCarthy) against Formulated Peet said that there is a "good the war in Vietnam, but he is feeling" among the fraternity pre- A more pessimistic view was the pace. The reason: "I didn't Tentative plans are now being taken of the council by John Vail, like the way the politics were against it for the right reasons." formulated to change the south sidents to form some kind of an McCarthy, he added, is not op- organization. The presidents rea- President of TX, He said his house being run, cornering people to Campus A Dormitory into a social did not want to be represented on vote lor me, etc." "It simply posed to legitimate use of force. unit on an experimental basis. Dean lize that they must get something The Associate Professor at Har- down on paper, yet the council the council, but he has been at- of Students Roy Heath expressed tending the council meetings to lis- vard Divinity School condemned the approval of the project and hoped is very informal at this time ac- war as "a grotesque misappro- cording to Peet. The fraternity ten. He stated that Hell Weeks will that the plan would materialize. Keniston Lectures priation of America's resour- Independents Council President presidents had agreed through the not be abolished, which thus means ces." council to observe the old IFC TX will not join a fraternity Kenneth Keniston, associate Stephen Lundeen '69, who pre- rushing regulations. At a meeting council. professor of psychology and "The war," noted Cox," is not sented the idea to the administra- held last night, Mason plans Vail said he does not know if psychiatry at Yale Univer- being fought on any just or moral tion, felt that, the new system were discussed with the intent of the fraternities can get a council, sity's Medical School, is the basis." The means being used are might eventually eliminate the lack setting dates for the beginning of for there is "no necessity" to have 1968 "Lecturer-in-Resid- not in proportion to the ends gain- of a community feeling on cam- the program. one. He further stated that a fra- ence," He will deliver a ser- ed, he said. Cox attacked the war pus. He stressed that the project because of the inability to dis- According to Dean Heath, the ternity council at the College is ies of three public lectures, would benefit not only indepen- formed for the sake of having one consisting of his observations criminate between combatants and dents and freshmen but fraternity Student Affairs Committee is an- non-combatants. "Napalm," he xious to have once again a re- for "it sounds like a good idea," on the personality of the new members by "providing social ne- but he said not too much inter- radicals. said, "cannot be used with the cessities with flexibility." presentative of some fraternity discrimination that the rules of war council, for the vital position of est is taken in the organization See story on page 5. (Continued on Page 9) Maternities on campus is lost if the once it is established. FEBRUARY 13, 1968 PAGE 2 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Clark Gable and Company Return Thomson, Hastings Conduct Tonight's Music Happening With Love, Hatred, and Civil War Tonight at 7 o'clock there will Schubert, Mozart, Mussorgsky, by Warren Kalbacker be "A Musical Happening on Saint and Beethoven will be performed "Gone With The Wind" has never play affords her plenty of time for orama, showing thousands of Valentine's Eve", which will draw by the two-college orchestral been shown on television-Metro- three husbands). Olivia de Havil- wounded soldiers sprawled on the combined talents of The group, which will be joined by pro- Goldwyn-Mayer finds it much more and and Leslie Howard are throughout a rail yard, is parti- Connecticut College Symphony and fessional musicians from the Hart- lucrative to simply re-release the the other major characters in. cularly memorable. As is common the College Orchestra. The sixty- ford area. 1939 epic every few years. Face- a story which encompasses love, in the early days of technicolor, member combined orchestra will According to Hastings, the "open lifted for the current trade with hate, and personal tragedy, in the costumes and sets sometimes provide the first example of pro- rehearsal" will be one of the fin- \ •stereophonic sound and projected addition to the Civil War. Under appear rather gaudy. fessional-quality instrumental est musical presentations on cam- j mto a wide screen, the film is Victor Fleming's direction, the music to be held in Goodwin Thea- pus this season. In particular, he j IOW playing at the Cinerama Thea- actors perform with grace and po- Watching "Gone With the Wind" ter. The Art Center will take ad- stressed that TANGO LULLABY ; tre. lish. At times, however, Miss de in 1968 can be an eerie exper- vantage of its acoustical equip- will be conducted by composer Vir- ! Acclaimed as a classic and win- Haviland's innocence seems a ience. Perhaps this feeling stems ment, experimenting with shell and gil Thomson, providing "a wonder- ..; ner of numerous Academy Awards, bit forced. The large supporting more from the film itself than from half-shell acoustics. ful opportunity for the College f this story of the Old South re- cast is also worthy of mention-the its story. Most of the principal The performance, part of which community to see Mr. Thomson presents the "old cinema" at its whites for rousing rebel yells, the actors have since died and the will be conducted by Visiting Pro- conducting one of his own mas- peak, while at the same time pre- blacks for their many variations picture stands as a kind of mon- fessor of Music and world fam- terpieces." figuring contemporary film trends. of "yes'm." ument to the glamorous style that ous composer Virgil Thomson, The Art Center has also an- Max Steiner's overture sets The most engrossing feature of was once synonymous with Holly- is billed as an "open rehearsal". nounced that the College Symphonic the mood of another era.' Clark "Gone With the Wind" is Ernest wood. It is obvious that "Gone Thomson will be conducting his own Band has made arrangements Gable, the classic hero, handles Haller's color photography. Some- With the Wind" would not be made composition, TANGO LULLABY. to perform Stravinsky's CON- his role of Rhett Butler in a what faded and blurred, but still today. There are no more Clark Also conducting will be Baird CERTO FOR WINDS AND PIANO 1 suave, romantic manner never impressive, it makes notable use Gables, and besides, any self- Hastings, Director of the College on Thursday, March 7. Igor Stra- i seen in today's films. Vivian of in-motion shots and stark sty- respecting civil-rights group Orchestra and Margaret Wills, vinsky, his son and a celebrated Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara plays lization. Most often, however, would feel obliged to picket its' conductor of the Connecticut pianist, has been engaged for that the most famous bitch in Amer- spectacle is the keynote. One pan- showing. College Orchestra. The music of presentation. ican history (the four hour screen- Marceau's University of Hartford Silent Drama Political Forum Film Series The Film "Exodus" will be shown February 17 at 8:00 p.m. At Bushnell at the Auerbach Auditorium, by Dean Walker and 8 p.m. on the 18th Last Thursday night, Marcel in Greer Auditorium, U. Of Hartford Marceau, world famous mime, presented a program at the Bush- 1. Looking up more 2. Do the girls get nell. The dance would have to be words, lYlc'r1 the art form closest to his style: tin- message? every movement is graceful, and I've always had Indubitably, awkward gestures are merely ex- a predilection The. effect is aggerations. And because of its for polysyllabic monumentally ritualistic nature, everything is communication. hypnotic. important. In addition to poise and timing, the dramatic force evident in his facial expressions is most effective. Should you see Marceau sometime, sit close enough to observe his face cieai'ly. The sub- tlety of his best pieces which sug- « Specie! This Week gest pathos has to be caught in Ms face. «•• Owe Day S&r.-'ue A flag with title announced each selection. This and occasional Coropkrte Laundry cmd Dry Cfeening Servi.eas music were the only supplements to the wordless acting. Every- one laughed and it wasn't just from • E*p*rt Yaiie-riwj a new pleasure. There were many comments from the audience re- Swsemenf Coftfc A garding pieces Marceau had per- formed elsewhere, and there was All But The Linen Service Will B» •5, Hi-ally? 4. Gosh. great approval from those seeing Open On Saturday 9:30-1:00 favorite subjects once again. KiiNcv phraseology As a modus operand! in Marceau is a theatrical legend and produces a salubrious establishing a continuous part of his reputation is based on result, especially program of rewarding the variety anddifferenceof mean- during [he vernal social contacts, I find ing included in his action. e([uino\. verbiage highly efficacious. There were such subjects as The Kite that were realistic; The Spring Vacation Suggestions. . . Fair Ground and The Public Gar- den were mood pieces. Youth, Ma- Chosen by Henry Miller and Reflecting Distinctive, turity, Old Age and Death was the most dance-like and the least de- Correct Taste Usually Unavailable Elsewhere. pendent on specific, natural move- ment. It was the purest, most poe- tic statement. Marceau's humor is * SWIM TRUNKS really its own complete world, ranging past situations to some- -* BERMUDA SHORTS thing more subtle, a combination of what is immediately amus- * COLOURED LINEN JACKETS ing with a detached description that is rather poignant, as in Bip * COLOURED LINEN TROUSERS Hunts Butterflies. : Bip is the subject of the sit- *TOPSIDER SNEAKERS uations in the second half of the • 5. Funny, all / do is tell a evening. Now with a specific char- * INDIA MADRAS SHIRTS girl I've lined up one of , acter, Marceau reaches a more * BRITISH POLO SHIRTS those great jobs Equitable complicated result. Bip is a very < is offering—you know, engaging; everyman figure; tieiis an challenge, opportunity, exaggeration1, but is not presented important work, good pay— and I get all the dates 1 is 1 an exaggerated manner. You Trinity's Closest Complete really have Marceau's com- can handle. mentary on Bip running through Clothing Store all the Bip pieces. • .. Like, man, it really The tour de force was Marceau grooves 'em, huh?' as Bip as David and Goliath with Open Monday Through Saturday only, a panel as a shie,ld. After a fitting introduction of the Bib- ;lical figures there ensues a'chase in hide-and-seek fashion. The final CLOTHIER Fl KN bows were an important revelation The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the of distinct personality:: first, David and Goliath as played by Bip, then, Hunif OifUr: 12S.5 Ave. of tin- Aim-vicas, Xew York; X.V. 10019 AM Equal Opportunity Eniiifoijer, JJ, I* ,;• KquitabU, 19fia Bip himself, and finally Marceau, 24 TRUMBULL STREET • HARTFORD •••' a consummate performer and an ; artist* . . FEBRUARY 13. 1968 THE TRINITY TRIPOD "The Graduate' Glee Club in Artistic Afterthought Concert with by Jim Petersen Smith Choir There is a growing trend among be... different" but thefilmat most film-makers to anticlimax their allows him the identity of a Jack- On Sunday, the College Glee works with an "artistic after- ie Vernon-Stan Laurel straight Club will perform its second joint thought"—a brief gesture or event man. His most common method concert of the season, singing with that transforms Northrop Frye's of coping with the absurd obstacles the Smith College Choir. critical construct into a wheel that confront him is a pathetic The performance on the Trin- of fortune which, as the audience whimper, a form of quiet despera- Elaine's father, he is beautifully coats, content with the success- ity campus will take place in the rises to leave, slowly turns one tion that Joseph Wood Krutch, realistic in describing the affair ful completion of the romantic Chapel and will begin at 8:15 more notch into or closer to ano- in the Modern Temper, has de- with her mother as being no more quest. But the camera remains on p.m. ther mode. The most dramatic in- scribed as "an impotent protest important than "shaking hands." their faces a moment longer. Ben- The groups will be accompanied stances of this device were the against the realization that he is jamin and Elaine exchange glances, by a professional woodwind ensem- dematerialization of the photogra- playing the animal's part without Benjamin loses Elaine to a Ber- and then sit without looking at ble and will be conducted by Mr. pher's image in BLOW-UP, and being blessed with the animal'sun- keley face man. He drives each other. As their happily-ever- Robert Gronquist, the Director of the second accident inACCIDENT. conscious acquiescence; the more desperately to their wedding in his after smiles fade, the thought en- the Trinity Glee Club. The per- Lighter touches of the same tech- highly developed the reflective graduation gift, a bright red Alfa ters your mind, as it has theirs, formance will include three works nique occurred in the gar den/ham - powers of the individual become, Romeo, "good for picking up the "So what do you do now?" by Henry Purcell and will be high- mer-and-sickle scene in MORGAN, the more likely is that quiet de- girls". He discards this last sym- The resolution of this final lighted by Stravinsky's MASS for and the final exit of THE FLIM- speration to become an active bol of his parents' world (it runs irony was undertaken by a film mixed chorus and woodwind FLAM MAN, These endings par- rebellion." out of gas) and returns to the state that chronologically preceded the ensemble, an exciting work rich in modern harmony. This is one enthetically enclose the film and Benjamin's confusion begins of innocence of his college days, GRADUATE, but seems the log- turn the major themes back upon where he was captain of his cross ical sequel. MORGAN deals with of Stravinsky's best-known works when "the most attractive of (his) and is characteristic of the modern themselves, causing us to recon- mother's friends" makes herself country team. He arrives too late the paradise-lost troubles of an sider their development, and stands pounding on the picture identical couple, and the attempt of style for which he is famous. available to him. In the course of Trinity's first concert with the The Mike Nichols-Lawrence the affair, she forbids Mm access window-balcony of the church, the boy to rescue the girl from screaming Elaine's name. She remarriage into the establishment. Connecticut College Choir last Turman production of THE GRAD- to her daughter, Elaine. With the November, when Handel's ODE ON UATE is the most recent and. establishment of a suitable quest looks up at him, transfigured, He ends up in an asylum. and in a brilliantly photographed THE GRADUATE is, at the mo- ST. CECILIA'S DAY was per- perhaps most subtle use of the object, he begins to rebel, and here formed, proved to be one of the technique. The story, a twentieth we find the few scenes where he apostasy, sees but does not hear the ment, the best film showing in screaming mounths of the people Hartford, and as goes Hartford, musical highlights of the season century version of Spenser's achieves full self-consciousness. in the Hartford area and the forth- FAERIE QUEEN, centers around He pursues Elaine to Berkeley, around her. She chooses Ben- so goes the nation. It is amus- jamin's vorld and they flee the ing, at times sensitive, with beau- coming Smith concert promises to the post graduate inactivities of where she confronts him in an off- be comparable. Benjamin Bramrock. Benjamin is campus apartment. He is unable to church, boarding a Santa Barbara tiful photography that is more than "concerned with his future" but speak to her, but his silence is a bus. They take the last seat smil- has come to be expected. And, per- In addition to the performance confused by an environment with more articulate vessel of his char- ing, seemingly unaffected by the haps, most signifigantly, it is a at Trinity, both groups will get rules that seem to make them- acter then all of the previous dia- stares of the people around them. heartening example of Mike together again on March 3, toper- selves. He had always "wanted to logue. And, in the scene with The audience begins to reach for Nichols' film craft. form the concert on the Smith College campus in Northampton, . Massachusetts, this time con- ducted by the Smith Director, Miss Katherine Melhorn. Robertson... (Continued from Page 1) standard of operation and to attract and keep the kind of faculty men we are after." When asked why the College charges a. tuition equivalent to that of most Ivy League schools and yet is possibly projected to fall to rank C next year in facul- ty salaries, Robertson answered by contrasting the endowments of the schools in question. According toanarticlepublished in the October 1967 issue of FORTUNE Magazine, in terms of endowment the College stands well below those with whom she com- petes for faculty. In commenting upon this endow- ment rift, Robertson unabashedly (Continued on Page 7)

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Year 2000, here we come Friendly ice Cream Shop 1235 Farmington Ave. West Hartford, Conn. United Illuminating is an electric utility But we need more. Mechanical and electrical 521-5651 company. Right now we're building giant power engineers. Accountants. Technical sales facilities, substations, transmission lines. people. Guys with their feet on the ground and their eyes on the future. PARK FREE NEXT But that's not all. We're also planning for DOOR m.lSUN. We're willing to pay to get them, and provide WMKi the year 2000, when we'll need eight times •NOW PLAYING! the challenges, rewards, and opportunities today's power capacity. ./ X "ONE OF for advancement to keep them. And we'll push \ THE Already, our industry is deep in nuclear them to further their education, formally YEAR'S power, extra-high-voltage transmission, and informally, and help them to do it. 10 magnetohydrodynamics, and lots more. Oh yes—we serve a dynamic, good-to-live-in BEST!" Asa part of this fast-moving industry, III is section of Southern Connecticut. committed to growth — rapidly accelerating We'll be on campus in a few days. Check with growth. To meet this commitment, we need your placement office for the date of our visit. bright young people, ambitious people. We'd like to talk with you about Graduation Day plus One. And the year 2000. GRADUATE Like the four pictured above. TECHNICOLOR SHOWN., ANNE BANCROFT 11:55-2:15 DUSTIN HOFFMAN -4:40-7 KATHARINE ROSS 9:20 United Illuminating SELECTED SHORTS! uan i.rvvpstor-ovvned electric light and power company PAGE 4 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Fine Acting Highlights 'Hostage:' Rollicking Entertaining Production

by Mike Plummer The Hostage, running- at the society except that which makes the isfying performances by Leighton, Hartford Stage Company, is a solid roads safer, the beer stronger, and John Bottoms as Monsewer, Vir- production, and a throughly enter- the food cheaper, and old men ginia Downing as the superb char- taining one. and women warmer in the winter icature of hypocrisy, Miss Gil- The setting is a disreputable and happier in the summer." Be- christ, and Robert Jennings as the lodging house in contemporary han's ultimate triumph of love and Russian sailor. The HartfordStage Dublin. Like those who live in laughter over life is best revealed Company is thoroughly profes- Ireland today, we are made ever in the gay closing song "Oh death sional in all aspects of its oper- mindful of the tension between where is thy sting-a-ling-a-llng." ation, and is definitely an oasis Ireland and England which began The production seemed nearly in its ironic location amidst the in the Twelfth Century. Internal, flawless. It ran about three hours, financial giants of the Insurance religious and political differences which may have been a bit long, Capital of the world. divided Ireland for centuries, but since the middle of the third act The Hostage was first produced as the seeds of revolution began appeared to drag, then recovered, in London in 1958, and came to to take root in France and Amer- Pat (John Leighton), ttie owner of Broadway in September, 1960. ica, a unity of purpose developed the lodging house, tips us off early Brendan Behan died in 1964 at among the Irish: a unity which de- in the play when he slumps in a the age of 41. The play will con- manded independence from Eng- chair, looks at the audience, and tinue through March 10, with ma- HARTFORD STAGE COMPANY actors rehearse for Brendan land and the establishment of an says: "The first act isn't half over tinees each Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Behan's play, The Hostages. From left to right: Marion Killinger, Irish Republic. The years from and I'm exhausted." The acting was and on Wednesday, February 14 Fred Hoskins, Lenny La Croix (Pianist); Judy McCauley, and 1916, when Dublin was taken by all very fine, with especially sat- and 23 at 2:00 p.m. Barbara Hot Ms. Irish patriots, to 1921, when a truce was drawn, were full of bloodshed by the Irish republican government and the British author- ities. At that time a treaty was drawn up dividing the territory of Ireland and freeing a portion of the country. But this too caused bitterness, much of which'is still alive today. The plot is drawn from the sparks of that mellowing hostility. Leslie (Saylor Cresswell) is a Performance young British soldier who is cap- tured and held hostage at the lodg- ing house by the Irish Republican Army. The reason is that a youny Irish boy has been imprisoned in Belfast and sentenced to die for drop-in shooting an English police officer. If the Irish boy is executed, the hostage will also be slain. We are introduced briefly to this plot, and the next hour is spent in, rollicking, robust song and con- versation. There are moments when an irrevocable change in mood seems inevitable, moments when we can, before the fact, feel the power it would have. But it *=» never comes. There are serious moments, some of them beauti- fully done (as the dialogue be- tween Leslie and Theresa, his in- nocent love-interest), but gener- ally we find Behan's "mes- sage" amidst the gaiety. Most of the European human con- dition dramas, despite the laughter they may evoke, carry grim or tragic underlying atti- tudes. But Belian, with strong racy satire, makes a real ,comedy out of the absurd human condi- NEW DODGE CORONET "SUPER BEE" mm tion. Warfare, the tensions ot group living, and nationalism, parti- cularly Irish nationalism, are Scat Pack performance at a new low price. satirized in song and revelry. Punching a Super Bee is Me dropping a bowling ball down an elevator shaft. It starts rather Behan's intentions are made suddenly and improves from there. Owning a Super Bee is discovering that Piper-Heidsieck even more clear in the Hartford is selling at beer prices/let's face it. When you put a hot cammed 383 V8 in a light coupe body, Stage Company's news release on hang all the good stuff underneath, and price it below anything as quick, something's got to The Hostage: "Because he thought that today's dramatists must happen. The good stuff is listed below. The kicks are waiting at your nearby Dodge Dealer's. amuse their audiences, but that it Let it happen to you. is the message slipped to them while they're laughing that makes B POWER PLANT: Standard: 383 CID V8. Carb: 4-bbt. Compression ratio: 10:0. Horsepower: 335 at 5200 RPM. Torque: a" great play, Behan made his 425 Ibs.-ft. at 3400 RPM. Air cleaner: unsilenced, both standard and optional V8. Optional: Hemi 426 CID'VS. Hemi- comments on religion, sex, and spherical combustion chambers. 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Sunday Name size 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. & 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Address ', CHRYSLER Dodge MOTORS CORPORATION City . state Zip Offer good only in Continental U.S.A. FEBRUARY 13, 1968 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Keniston, 1968 Lecturer, Herschberger Named To Speak on New Radicals Professor at CCSC Kenneth Keniston, the author Movement Work" Dr. Austin C. Herschberger, of the widely read work "The Feb. 21 Wednesday "Change, associate professor of psychology Uncommitted: Alienated Youth in Violence and Search for New at the College, has been appoint- American Society," will spend a Forms" ed associate professor to the week on the campus beginning Admission to all three lectures faculty of Central Connecticut State Monday, Feb. 19. is by ticket, which may be ob- College, President Herbert D. The 1968 "Lecturer-in-Resi- tained free at the Mather Hall Welte announced last week. Leav- dence" at the College is an asso- desk. ing after seven years here, Her- ciate professor of psychology and In addition to the three public schberger formerly taught at psychiatry at Yale's School of lectures, Keniston will visit with the University of Chicago, Univer- Medicine and is well known for student groups, will conduct a sity of Illinois, and Kenyon Col- his research on personality de- special seminar for which regis- lege. He holds a bachelor's de- velopment particularly among col- tration has been taken and the gree from Columbia University, lege students, which is the basis lecturer will be the guest at a masters and doctorate degrees of his book published in 1965. number of receptions and lunch- from the University of Illinois, Kenniston will give three public eons. all in psychology. lecturers. On consecutive nights An open reception for all stu- Herschberger also holds a Na- at 8:30 in the Washington Room, dents will be held in the Wean tional Science Foundation grant he will talk on: Lounge at 2:30 p.m. on Wednes- for undergraduate research and Feb. 19 Monday "Psychological day. lias been a consultant to the found- Issues in the Development of Radi- A member of the Yale faculty ation for the past four years. cals" since 1962, Keniston is a mem- He is a member of the American, Kenneth Keniston Feb. 20 Tuesday "Tensions of ber of both the Psychology and the Eastern, New England and Con- Austin C. Herschberger Psychiatry departments at Yale, necticut psychological associa- and teaches undergraduates, medi- tions, the American Association tant to college volunteers working cal students, and psychiatric resi- for the Advancement of Science and in summer programs sponsoredby dents. the American Association of Un- the mission, He attended Colegio Nacional de iversity Professors. Herschberger has contributed Buenos Aires in 1942-1944 and The Canton resident is organ- articles to "ThePsychologicalRe- Ann Arbor, Michigan High School in ist and vestryman of Grace Epis- cord" and is co-editor and contri- 1944-1947, and then entered Har- copal- Church, Hartford and a char- butor to the "CollegeStudent Com- vard. He received his B.A, degree ter member of the Episcopal Me- panion/' published by the State from Harvard inl951 and then, hav- tropolitan Mission of Greater Department of Mental Health and ing been selected for a Rhodes Hartford. In addition, Hersch- the National Institute of Mental Scholarship, attended Balliol Col- berger is a psychological consul- Health. lege at Oxford University in 1951- 1953 and again in' 1955-1956. He received his Doctor of Philosophy degree from Oxford in 1956. Concordiensis Thanks* He was a Junior Fellow in Har- 1. What (in earth is that? vard's Society of Fellows in 1953- 1956, and from 1956-1962 served as The world's first almost a researcher and lecturer in gen- Applauds Lockwood perfect pickle .slirer. eral education and later in clinical The "Concordiensis", the Union college to do what is necessary psychology at Harvard. College campus newspaper, re- to put it in the front rank of pri- He was a Fellow of Eliot House cently carried a front page article vate liberal arts colleges" is what at Harvard from 1953-1902 and a congratulating Dean of the Fac- Lockwood described as the nio&t Fellow of Davenport College at ulty Theodore D. Lockwood for the impressive change he has seen Yale since 1962. In 1964, he was respect and the admiration he during his stay at Union. named to the Yale University Coun- earned while at Union. LocJcwood Lockwood maintained that the cil1 s Committee "on Yale College by was also thanked for his invalu- limiting of the major and the com- the Committee Chairman, John able patience and assistance mitment to courses rather than Hersey, the noted writer and Mas- to Union. .. • semester hours was an important ter of Pierson College at Yale. "The real commitment by the aspect among the new and distinc- tive programs given Union. Each course is given equal value at Union and thus each major re- quires equal effort. Lockwood also TRAVEL WITH NSA- noted that the policy of only two required courses in the fresh- 2. What d'you mean •'}. I low (1 \ on make oul The Official man year has provided "the kind 'silniostp' with your sell-sliarpeiiiii^ of flexibility" that Union needed. tnntlipiek.J Lockwood noted that another sign It keeps rejecting dills. of a fresh willingness to examine I i;ave it up to work Student Travel Bureau academic programs to make them on in\ pre-stretclied more flexible and open to ex- rubber band. periment is the 3-5 plan, which may be adopted at Union. This Save up to 60% on air fares and would give students the opportun- ity to obtain an undergraduate de- gree in three years and masters accommodation in Europe. in five years. < Only the National Student Association can offer Lockwood left Union on Feb- you these savings, because we ore a non-profit ruary 2. Before arriving"at-.Trin- ity in late June, Lockwood will organization, run exclusively for students. be studying, meeting with other Look at NSA's unique travel services. College presidents and trustees, and becoming better acquainted • International Student I.D. Card which gives you with the issues facing the college. huge savings on lodging, restaurants, transportation, museums, galleries, theaters and stores, Tuition... • Student Trips and Study Programs. A complete (Continued from Page 1) 4. Kvcr considered going into 5. Muvbe \on ought to look selection of trips, tours, and study programs. zi '69 reports that the Bean is willing to re-activate the Student a field more likely to give into tin- openings at Equi table. A unique opportunity to meet and get to know yon a living income? They've got a wide range of Leaders Committee as a compro- I'ascitiiiting jobs that give you students from other countries. mise move. Whether the commit- But I want to he of tee would have the power to more the chance to be of service. • Official Student Travel Publications, which give service to humanity. And they also give you a than discuss the Issue is not known And I like ihe challenge salary sou can live on. you a wealth of information on accommodations, at this time. it provides. transportation, restaurants, sights, nightlife, In an action strongly condemned Say, think they'd lie shopping. All tailored to student tastes and budgets. by several members of the Sen- interested in my ate, freshman Nicholas G. Maklary fail-safe lint picker? Start your planning now. See your Campus personally contacted several Travel Rep or clip the Coupon. members of the Trustees in an 11 • • • i • • i • a • a • • • • a > • • i • > < • • • i effort to reach a compromise in contradiction to the will of the U.S.National Student Association ETI (Dept. N2) majority expressed by the Senate 265 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10016. Thursday nig-ht. Mak'lary's action, according to some of those who Make an appointment through your Placement Officer to • Please send me details on your student travel services condemned it, was of value because and the I.D. card. it revealed that several Trustees see Equitable's employment representative on February did not know anything about the 19 or write:, James !_. Morice, Manager,'College Employ- • Trips-and Study programs. threatened strike. • American Programs ment. Addressing the open Senate meeting Heath told the students The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Name- that he saw their dilemma as a Home Office: 128o Ave. of the Americas, Xow York, N.Y. 10018 fight for" an Ideal of what the col- ^« Equal Opportunity Kmplutjer, U/V r. Kriniiiihlc 1068 Add ress_ lege commlnity ought to be. Stu- City _State_ _Zip. dents, he said, want to have a say in decisions made about their lives. FEBRUARY 13, 1968 PAGE 6 THE TRINITY TRIPOD LETTERS to the chairman tfrtyoft What is unfortunate is that one and that the case had been con- 'inaccurate' small part of the college, the ath- sidered on its own merits. It was letic department, finds this im- meant to show that we have got- possible. I am referring to its ten away from norms in JUDG- OPEN LETTER TO THE COL- policy of refusing bearded and long MENT of cases; it was not meant LEGE COMMUNITY: haired students the right to par- to imply any policy on ENFORCE- ticipate in varsity athletics. Why MENT of parietal rules. The gist EDITORIAL SECTION does the athletic department-which of your coverage of the mat- The statement appearing on purports to REPRESENT the col- ter seems to imply the latter, Friday in both the HARTFORD lege-have the right to force stu- But since the case was judged on COURANT and the HARTFORD dents to change their physical ap- the basis of its own relationship FEBRUARY 13, 1968 TIMES concerning the financial pearance when the college as to the community's standards of situation of Trinity College was a whole has no such rule? rights and sensibilities — a prin- an inaccurate representation of ciple to which the Medusa has ex- my conversation with a COURANT WERNER LOW '69 plicitly committed itself over and reporter. There is no support for over — it cannot be understood as Toward Voice In the Information Vacuum any charge of financial misman- setting a policy in regard to the agement at Trinity College, nor 'viable model' 1 rules themselves. are the financial affairs of this TO THE CHAIRMAN: college related to the roots of THE MEDUSA Had there been an openness of communication based upon current student unrest. It seems This letter is to supplement :mutual consideration, there would be no issue upon which to to me that the real issue now your editorial and article of concerns a closed administrative DAVID CHANIN mount a student strike. . ' last week covering the par- MALCOLM HAYWARD policy, structured to exclude stu- ietal rule violation. A minor The tuition increase, while the case at hand, is not the prin- dents from the decision making SAMUEL ELKIN ciple at task. Information and knowledge of the sincere intent correction should be made: a DENNIS FARBER process in matters that are of FORMAL rather than a "final" of the Administration to consult students in affairs concerning great concern to all members of MICHAEL FLOYD warning was the verdict of GERALD PRYOR student life is essential. the college community. Let me the Faculty-Medusa 3-3 Com- At the same time, it is requisite that the students who would reason to question the fiscal con- DANIEL GOLDBERG duct of this college. mittee. Formal warning is a perpetrate a strike be honest in their intent. 'Student Power' method of talcing official notice is NOT the butt of a college education. There is room only for The issue is elsewhere. and record of an irresponsible 'your every right' involved cooperation based upon mutual trust. action. Students are concerned about things that concern their lives— STEVEN H. KEENEY' 71 Concern for the integrity of the OPEN LETTER TO THE TRUS- t about the quality of their education and the finances of their Medus'a's decisions was — as you TEES: reported — a reason for the es- college. It is a mistake to interpret the reaction to the cavalier (Editor's Note: The following announcement of a tuition increase as belligerent. tablishment of the 3-3 Committee. is an explanation of the Hart- But it was only part of the rea- Being a member of the college At the same time, the Senate must gain the composure that, ford Courant story of Friday son. Also, there was an interesf community in the most direct way, I their overreaction to the statement caused them to lose and February 9 referring to; the In expanding the idea of the par- as a student, I've been curious t thereby to make unreasonable demands upon the Trustees. alleged loss of $1.2 ', million ticipating community to the about a number of very relevant in investments in the bond Faculty, This Committee is sim- issues. Before I ask you for in- | market, the following is an ultaneously a vehicle for cooper- formation pertaining to these, I I In the spirit of responsible community, the TRIPOD effected the explanation: Principle amount ation and for protection of the want to point out that I do be- j lieve in your, every right and ques- j understanding with Treasurer of the College, Kenneth Robertson, of a fixed income security student involved, for it brings both the consideration and the authority tion in no way your abilities to j that will afford direct communication between students and ad- (i.e. bond) fluctuates in such run the finances of the college, j ministration. It is through such channels that communications a way as to make the yield on of the Faculty to bear on a given decision. Since the Statutes of the especially since most of the stu- \ must DEVELOP. the security competitive with College explicitly relegate student dents, myself included, know very | the going interest rate. Be- discipline to the entire Faculty and little about the financial demands '•* The figures that can explicate and provide the basis for a cause. the . College bought placed upon Trinity. I know so meaningful dialogue have been made available. K subsequently to its Committee on bonds-at a.yield.that was lower'., .Academic Standing and Discipline, little ,, that .in reference to. the Face Reality. The tuition increase was needed. Now is the than the present rate, as the the :chances of "overruling a de- raising of tuition I found myself time to monopolize on the situation at hand. Investigate and see interest rose on the bond mar- unable even to take a stand along cision of the 3-3 Committee are with my fellow students, many of that the finances of the College are best directed, and in so doing, ket, the principle amount dec- minimized. whom have taken rash stands on the keep the channels of communication between key administrators, lined. However, at maturity Finally, the significance of this issue. students, and faculty open. date the ivhole principle value case does not lie in any indi- is paid off. Thus it is impos- cation of policy concerning the en- Here then is what I, as a stu- In this spirit, the TRIPOD sees every reason for students to sible to lose money if you forcement of College rules. It dent, would like to know: is not an exception to a continued 1. How much money, on a semes- abandon plans for a strike and calls upon the Trustees to publish hold the security to maturity.J a partial agenda previous to each meeting setting forth matters determination on the part of the ter basis, is given to each de- [ Medusa to "uphold College rules." partment? | of concern to students. 'nicer' Rather, the case is precedent-set- 2. On what basis are faculty j Information and the voice to recommend will avoid another ting in that the principle of no salary raises given? [ "misunderstanding" of the magnitude of last Tuesday's tuition norm punishments has for the first 3. How much is given to the crisis. TO THE CHAIRMAN: time been extended to this area athletic department, and in that of judicial deliberation. For the department how much is used for [ • first time a viable model for de- inter-collegiate competitive ac- | As far as I'm concerned, one fining and weighting the consti- tivities? | of the nicer things about college tuent elements of the "rights and 4. In what corporations is there j is that it's a good time to try sensibilities" of the community in money invested? How much is j out various forms of self expres- reference to a parietal violation invested and in what form is it j sion without worrying about losing has been established. The injunc- invested? j your job or being court martial- tion appended to the public notice 5. What corporations are the ! ed. The college, for all its short- of the Committee's decision — i. e., members of the Board of Trustees^ comings, realizes the transitional that "this is not to be taken for involved in and what do these ftrimty tfripoft general legislation" -- was in- nature of these years and allows involvements consist of? for as wide a range of action and tended to emphasize that the de- cision did not establish a new norn- Any aid you can give me in j appearance as it feels it can. (Continued on Page 7)j

EDITOBIAL BOAKI) ! Chairman Jacobs Eegrets Misunderstanding A. Rand Gordon '69 President By vote of the Committee on Committee on Student Affairs... study the situation had confirmed John Osier '70 Student Affairs at its monthly I deeply regret that the tuition this fact beyond a doubt that I meeting held February 6, 1968; announcement has resulted in a made my recommendation to the Contributing Editor News Editor .liVnture Kditor Trustees. To have done other wise James Kaplan '6S - Kenneth P. Winlder '71 David VV. Green '71 Whereas the announcement of feeling on the part of the stu- the tuition increase and the dents that there had been a lack would not have been fair to this Co-photogrraphy Editors Arts Editor Sports Editor fine institution which has come to nw,i* A tr,« i •/-« Richmond S. Hendee '69 student reaction to it have of communication and understand- ueraia A. Hatch 69 Alexander J. Belida '70 Assistant Sports Kditor revealed a lack of commun- ing in this instance. I am sure mean so much to me during this William B. Rosenblatt '69 . Judd Freeman .'69 ication and understanding in that my two periods of illness, past fifteen years. the College, and because the and particularly the latter one, I regard it as of the utmost im- STAFF decision to make the increase coming at such an inconvenient portance that our students should Wilbur A. Glahn III '69, Michael J. Plummer '69,'Michael A. Sample '6!'. and Its announcement neglect- appreciate the need for this in- Wayne L. Slingluft '69. Michael A. Chamish '70. Hush M. Elder '70. time, have contributed materially William C. Flood '70. James.S. Petersen '70, Frederick E. Rose '70, Peter ed to use the means of com- to this situation, and I am truly crease intuitionand understand the Starke '70, Charles Wright '70, Paul R. Burton '71, J. Warren Knlbacker resoived that the Trustees '71, Alan L. Marelilsotto '7.1, David Sarasnhn '71, Michael E. TriffK '71, sorry... reasons therefor. I am therefore, Mark J. Weinstein '71, Dean C. Walker '70. Steve Dowlnsky '71 A and Administration be asked I am sure that the Committee asking our new Student Senate to W. Kennedy '71, Barry Nance '71. Rod Kebablan '71. Tom Zarchy '71. to communicate to the College Rob Stelgerwalt '71, Chris McCarthy '70. Thorn Thomson '70. ' Pelt- must realize the great reluctance establish the desired channels of Huidekeeper '71, Peter Wentz '71. community and explain the communication in behalf of the Stu- College's financial position, with which I faced the very dis- tasteful task of recommending, as dent Body by collecting, weigh- and that the College commun- ing and expressing the pertinent BUSINESS UOABI) ity, in turn, be asked to re- one of my final acts at Trinity, Business Manager an increase in tuition for this next questions about College finances • • . Leighton L. Smith '69 spond reasonably to the tui- that are uppermost in the minds tion increase by considering year. However, I was aware that Published weekly on Tuesdays during the academic year except, viiva- our College, like most of her sis- of the students, and forwarding this tions by students of Trinity College. Published at West Hartford News, in good faith the Trustees' list to me. For my part, I will Isham Road, West Hartford, Conn. decision. ter institutions, was face to face • Student subscription included in activities fee; others 58.50 per year. with a hard economic fact, that the do my best to provide satisfactory Second class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut, under the net of increase would surely be needed answers to these questions, and I March 3, 1879, : : TO THE SECRETARY OF THE will request the TRIPOD to pub- ' blfices located in the basement of Mather Hall, Trinity CoHese if Trinity's standard of perfor- liartiord, Connecticut 06106. COMMITTEE ON STUDENT AF- mance was not to deteriorate. It lish both the list of questions and •: ; Telephones: 246-1829. or 527-3153, e>ct 252 FAIRS: was only after an AD HOC Com- the answers, in order that the en- I have read with concern the mittee of the Faculty and Admin- tire student body will be informed, resolution which was voted by the istration that I had appointed to ALBERT C. JACOBS FEBRUARY 13, 1968 THE TRINITY TRIPOD PAGE 7

LETTERS to th airman IT'S IX THE AIR (Continued from Page 6) answering the above very im- teners and this is the light in Free Speech for Recruiters portant questions will be most which the administration has the by Haig Mardikian appreciated. Thank you very much. option of interpreting it. More- On February 15, a representa- but the entire student body by A college administration which over, by using this instrument for tive oi the Dow Chemical Company JONATHAN G. GRANOFF '70 this issue, the student body would, association is assisting- the war would ban the Dow Chemical Com- will arrive at the Trinity Campus in Vietnam, and is therefore in pany from the campus today, could just as the boy who cried wolf, to conduct job interviews. The 'look for me in dull the effectiveness of this in- complicity with immorality. Such just as easily ban the anti-war arrival of the Dow recruiter at logic, however, is itself highly movement from the campus strument should it be used on mat- campuses across the country has the classroom* ters more vital to student well detrimental to the integrity of a tomorrow. If exceptions be permit- recently been the focal point for college community. There is, one ted whereby freedom of dialogue on TO THE CHAIRMAN: being. numerous student demonstrations. should take note, another side of Many students validly feel that college campuses becomes Dow, a company of diversified the issue which the protesters abridgeable, it should be pointed out The news programs of the lo- there should be a vigorous asser- interests, is the major supplier of conveniently appear to have over- tion of the necessity of im- that the anti-war movement would cal radio stations have carried napalm to the United States milit- looked. By attempting to eliminate, more than likely itself become a a statement by the president of proved student-administration ary. It is this fact which has or interfering with any lawful on- communication. To this I victim. SDS at this college that plans are earned for Dow the dubious honor campus function which certain stu- Dows military napalm contract being made for a student strike agree, within certain fairly broad of being the most popular target dents may have the desire to part- limits. However, of all the focal accounts for less than one-half this week due to the announce- for campus anti-war protests. As icipate in, the protesters are blat- of one percent of the company's ment by the Treasurer of a tui- points available about which to call of November there had been antly infringing upon the right of a strike, I regard the tuition raise total earnings. Despite the small- tion increase. If this strike is twenty-seven demonstrations freedom of choice of those indivi- ness of their "vested interest in called, as matters now stand I as the worst choice. Should a strike dual students on their respective be called to obtain a sociology against Dow recruiters. In sever- war", Dow, in order to abate shall continue to go to my class- al instances, those students who campuses. the moral indignation towards their es, and I would like to say why. department or student opinion in social innovations, curriculum sought to have job interviews were An encroachment of this type, company fostered by a growing- I regard a strike as a valid changes, or construction prior- prevented from meeting with the on the rights of any student, is number of students, has definitive- and, if used wisely, a powerful ities I would 'favor such a move. Dow officials. Out of fear of further a dangerous precedent to allow ly stated the company's position in instrument for influencing policy However, if a strike is called strife, several schools (at this established. It is ironical how- a recent press release: at Trinity College. I do not re- due to the tuition raise, look for time five universities) have ban- ever that such activities are today "The United States is involved gard the proposed strike as a me in the classroom. And If the ned the company from their camp- condoned by many of the liberal in Vietnam. As long as we are wise use of this instrument in strike is used later for these valid uses. intellectuals who previously prof- involved, we believe in fulfilling view of the cause proposed. There reasons, but is relatively inef- It is assumed by the "Dow- essed such deep rooted commit- our responsibility to this national are those' who will say that the fective, thank those people who Day" protesters, that should a ment to the battle for "free commitment of a democratic tuition increase is not the pri- struck on the tuition issue. college allow the Dow company speech". It would appear that the society. And we do this because mary cause of the strike. Yet this to conduct interviews for job seek- "open campus" of the liberals we believe in the long-term goals is the light in which the strike ing candidates on the campus; would, not in fact be as open as of our country." has been presented to radio lis- RALPH G. WHITE '68 not only the college administration, one might assume. (Continued on Page 10) Committee to Choose J. A. 's for 1972 Applications Decline; Selection Committee Reorganized

by David Green decided to use a student com- than juniors or sophomores have J.A. But if they don't, it is our "It depends upon the calibre of mittee because he felt that with- with freshmen. According to Hig- job during the first few weeks to the individual, and how seriously .The Junior Advisers for the out one "there is too high a gins, both seniors and freshmen search them out." ^ he takes his job," declared Ehren- Class of 1972 are being select- premium on the Dean of Students are not entirely involved with cam- Dean Heath wrote last year that berg. ed by a committee composed of knowing a sophomore," pus affairs. The seniors are look- Junior Advisers must be selected Sheckley said that it is probable the Dean of Students, one member Of the nine students on the ing out to the future and anxious carefully because "symbolically that a freshman might be attract- of the Medusa, five Junior Ad- committee, there is only one inde- about their careers. Similarly, the he will bear our official stamp." ed to his J.A.'s fraternity,, and visers, and three sophomores. The pendent. Heath acknowledged that freshmen still are involved with Nevertheless, in many of the that other fraternities might feel committee will select thirty-five a "snow ball effect develops al- their past experiences and essays of the sophomores who are that it will be difficult to. obtain to forty rising juniors from the though we try to run the College anxious about their future at the applying for the position, there are that freshman. seventy candidates who applied for without reference to fraternities." College. "Both freshmen and references to the poor selection Most of the candidates stress the position. Last year, nearly Last year, forty-three out of the of advisers. One sophomore wrote the importance of the Junior Ad- 150 sophomores submitted their forty-five Junior Advisers for the that "I know too many students viser's role during the first .cru- names for consideration. Dean Class of 1970 were in frater- who would laugh if you suggested cial weeks of school. The freshmen Heath attributed the decline in nities when they were appointed. '...there is a that they go have a serious talk are in a new environment - some the number of applications to the Of the thirty-eight Junior Advisers with their Junior Adviser." An- of them have never been away from new requirement that all candi- for the Class of 1971, only three other essay described how a J.A. home. The J.A. must give their dates write an essay on the func- were independents when they were confronted his advisees after a advisees all the pertinent informa- tion of the J.A. chosen. Three sophomores were built-in rush week of school; "I'm your J.A. tion that they will need to get The composition of this year's added to the selection committee which means I'll tell you anything along in College, But the associ- selection committee is different because it was felt that they would you want to know, like how to ation between the adviser and ad- •from those of previous years. know their class better than the. get some flooz or booz. I'm sup- visee during the rest of the year Last year, the President of the other members. All three are mechanism in posed to tell you all about the is also critical. "A good Junior Senate and the members of the in fraternities. rules of the College, but don't Adviser," wrote a candidate, "is The "snow ball effect" of which worry about any of them. They a personable sincere individual to Heath spoke may be a result of say there's no drinking, but don't, whom an unhappy or simply in- the committee's representation.In the system...' believe it - just stay in your quisitive freshman can always '...freshmen choosing sophomores, Verre room...But the guys aren't bad, turn. A J.A. cannot be a distant stated that "names come up be- seniors are detached, our of it- you can always find a pretty good or indifferent individual...he must cause they come up all over the they feel the shoe on the other party if you want - and there are be a warm, sincere person." naturally gravitate place." Since students who are foot," stated Higgins. "On the other plenty of road trips to get out not in a fraternity are often less hand, sophomores and juniors are of here." The author, while admit- active socially and are not as fa- very much with it, and they can ting that the picture was over- Robertson... miliar with fraternity brothers as be pretty cut-throat. It is the drawn, remarked "that this picture to the strongest those who are part of them, they sophomores and juniors who often is not as false as some would (Continued from Page 3) . may be overlooked. Peter Ehren- keep people out of fraternities." say." Another sophomore declared reminded that "theseotherinstitu- . berg, a Junior Adviser and a Nevertheless, Higgins affirmed in his essay that the two Junior tions (i.e. the Ivy League) could member of the selection commit- that Junior Advisers often do a Advisers he had "did a remarkable obviously beat us spades down in a figure in the tee, commented that the first meet- good job. job of being no help to any of the competition of faculty salaries If ing of the committee was "similar Since the Medusa decided to stop they so desired." He reiterated to a rush meeting of a frater- patrolling the dormitories, the J.A. that the "major and principle re- nity although there are great dif- has the duty to maintain order.But sponsibility (of the administration) dormitory ferences." the responsibility of the Junior '...a J.A must be is to secure and maintain the Last year, Dean Heath wrote Adviser, as defined by Heath, en- absolute best faculty we can within that "the primary concern of the compasses more. The importance our financial means." -the J.A. ...' Junior Adviser is the intellectual of being'a "friend" is cited by a warm, sincere In reviewing the budget expendi- development of the freshmen, most Junior Advisers when asked tures of the fiscal year ending June either in awakening the intellec- to discuss their relationships with 30, 1967, Robertson disclosed,fig- Medusa participated in the sel- tually unawakened or providing their advisees. Ehrenberg said person...' ures that pointed to the lack of ection of the Junior Advisers. intellectual challenge and com- that he wrote to his freshmen flexibility within which the; Col-V This year, however, only one se- panionship to those already before the first semester began lege operates. nior, Malcolm Hayward, is on the awakened. It follows, therefore, to inform them that he wished to sixteen freshmen" in their dormi- When asked why the students committee. Also, the number of that the Junior Adviser, himself, be "neither a patrolman or psy- tory. had not been informed or con- Juniors on the committee have be a well-developed person who chologist, but rather a friend." Higgins complained that Junior sulted about the post-facto an- been increased to five, all of enjoys the interplay of ideas and He emphasized that he felt that it Advisers generally "give good nounced tuition hike, one admin- whom are advisers. The sopho- can relate to human beings on the wasn't his job to "search out prob- social advice, poor academic ad- istration source remarked that more class is represented by three deeper levels." lems in people if they don't bring vice, and go in for too much rush- "the students had never been con- members of their class who have Whether a junior was best suited them to him." ing." Heath admitted that there is sulted: before and no one thought already been chosen to be J.A.'s to serve as an adviser to fresh- Barry Sheckley, another Junior a "built in rush mechanism" in to ask them now." In account- next year. men was questioned by Dr. Hig- Adviser who is on the selection, the system, but that it is not ing for the student concern, he Several years ago, the Dean of gins, Assistant Professor of Psy- committee, commented that intended. Ehrenberg said that he cited the "new tenor" of the stu- Students personally chose the chology and College Counselor, "feshmen naturally gravitate to thought that the remarks made dent body and expressed concern Junior Advisers. However, when who remarked that seniors have the strongest figure in the dormi- about Junior Advisers and rush- that the administration had been Heath came to the College, he more in common with freshmen tory, and that happens to be the ing were true until he became one. insensitive to the new spirit. FEBRUARY 13, 1968 PAGE 8 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Beaton Urges More Frosh Forums Terminated Concern for Alliances by Steven Cherniak After the last meeting of the their class, and to expose them to each program. He noted that, in sia. Britain regarded this war Freshman Forum, Dean of Students a range of fascinating and con- past years as well as in this, by Lawrence Katzenstein as the unpleasant but necessary Roy Heath concluded, in an over- troversial topics. programs dealing with provoca- On Monday, February 5 the Re- duty of a partner in, an alliance. all evaluation, that the Forum had Heath said the Forum failed tive and intimate topics such as ligion and Government depart- In view of America's present po- failed. He stated that the original basically because of consistently venereal disease and types of sex- ments hosted a colloquium en- sition towards alliances, Britain purpose of the Forum was to con- inadequate attendance at the meet- uality have always produced large titled "The American Genius for feels her presence in Asia is no front the freshman with the broad ings. He had no simple explana- student turnouts; but, tie added, Losing Friends". The colloquium longer justified. spectrum of ideas and personali-. tion to offer for the apparent lack he would not have the Freshman speaker was Mr. Leonard Beaton, Mr. Beaton had some interesting ties existing in the College as well of student participation. As far as Forum degenerate into a Forum who is currently serving as visit- observations about the war in Viet as within their own class. Ac- he could tell, the speakers were dealing exclusively with the more ing professor at the University of Nam. In discussing U.S. strategy cording to Heath, this amalgama- generally stimulating, and the few intriguing aspects of sex in order Toronto. A distinguished political in the war, he again alluded to tion of personalities and ideas was students who did attend produced to insure a substantial freshman economist, Mr. Beaton has served Britain's involvement in Malay- to stimulate a greater awareness, enthusiastic responses in the dis- turnout. as news analyst for the BBC. sia. Here, attempts by Commun- to get freshmen into closer con- cussions. He felt that sufficient In discussing America's genius ist insurgents to overrun the coun- tact with different members of effort had been made to publicize In short, the Freshman Forum, for losing friends, Mr. Beaton said try were successfully repelled. which was to have had its great- that the sign of a truly great na- In this little-publicized war est impact on a large percentage tion is its tendency to lose allies. of ten years' duration, British and of freshmen, ended up by reach- To prevent this loss, he stressed Malayan troops were able to ing very few. Now that the pre- that the U.S. should work hard to defeat the enemy without recourse sent Forum has been cancelled. develop strong alliances in which • to bombing, relying instead on a. Dow Chemical Recruiter Heath does not foresee the bene- each member nation would have a long-term effort at pacification. fits of having any similar series voice in formulating policy. Amer- Mr. Beaton said that this idea of programs in the Mure. Heath ica today is nation-oriented, re- of aprolonged, de-escalated strug- To Come; SDS to Protest said the Freshman Forum had a cognizing the integrity of indiv- gled should have been ap- fine potential goal, its pro- idual nations but failing to ap- plied to Viet Nam. He noted, how- grams were of consistently good ever, that there seemed to be A representative of the Dow student has a right to protest preciate the unifying and integra- Chemical Company will visit the in an orderly fashion and every quality, and there was no obvious ble bonds of alliance. Mr. Bea- something in the "American ethos" explanation on why the Forum which demands a speedy conclusion College February 15 to speak with student has a right to an inter- ton fears that America's disre- prospective employees. The re- view." The Administration would was not totally successful. Ac- gard for the importance of allian- to all problems. When asked his cording , to Heath, a strange sit- personal opinion on the conduct cruiting efforts of the corporation, intervene, he continued, only when ces will result in the alienation of which manufactures napalam a student attempted to violate their uation of freshman indifference her allies and the correspond- of the war, Mr. Beaton said he caused its failure. thought the U.S. should first of for use in the Vietnamese War, rights. ing loss of her position of world have met -with fierce opposition leadership. A perfect opportunity all de-escalate the war by stop- ping the bombing. Bombing, from students on campuses across is being presented to Russia to the country. gain this leadership, he continued he noted, was the greatest morale perhaps in as soon as ten years. builder possible. The U.S. should then give up attempts at regain- Reacting to the Company's ap- Mr. Beaton cites Britain's an- pearance at the College, the SDS nounced pullout from southern ing the Communist-held provinces and instead establish the "safe" Chapter will set up the project Asia, which greatly angered the table used in earlier demonstra- U.S. government, as a direct re- provinces as a home-base from which troops could gradually fail tions against military recruiters. sult of the present U.S. position According to SDS President Steven of de-emphasizing the perman- out and begin a program of lo- cal pacification. Mr. Beaton sur- H. Keeney '71, "there will be no ence or importance of alliances. physical barring." ;• . While in southernAsia, Britainhad mised that, were such a pro- engaged in a prolonged but ul- gram begun now, it might take timately successful war against' twenty years to achieve concrete Communist aggression in Malay- results. Dean of Students Roy Heath em- phasized his belief that "every

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ago that the enemy "was at the McCarthy... end of his tunnel". The fact that Squash... Placemen! . (Continued from Page 1) the Viet Cong were able to (Continued from Page 11) what's wrong: a society that can capture the American embassy more win in the final three indi- Wednesday, February 14 Monday, February 19 incinerate homes in Vietnam but hardly lends credence to this vidual matches was needed. can't build homes in New York, claim, he noted. Pete Wiles and Norm Hannay American Cyanamid Company - Equitable Life Assurance Soc- a society that can destroy rice in "You cannot conduct foreign lost quickly, however, and the Conference Room iety of the U. S. - Conference Vietnam but can't feed the child- policy based on duplicity without match rested on the Mike Ram- United Airlines - Card Room Room ren of Mississippi." it catching up to you," said Lo- seur-Chamlin match. American Express - Library International Harvester Com- Cox expressed concern about wenstein in regard to the Pueblo The contest was bitter from the Seminar Room #4 pany - Card Room fatalism in American thinking- incident. Noting that it took less beginning with both boys playing General Electric Company Federal Reserve Bank of Bos- •'regardless of what we do, we're time than usual to discover what excellently. The battle went back (Sciences) - Senate Room ton - Elton Lounge headed for a fiery cataclysm." was happening, he related that and forth to no avail, and there General Electric Company (BTC) "Whether we recover from our the US now claims the Pueblo was a 2-2 tie. The fifth and final Elton Lounge Tuesday, February 20 madness," he said, "is something was constantly in international game was heart-breaking for for which we must bear the res- waters—on the day it was cap- Trinity and Ramseur. Mike led Thursday, February 15 Hooker Chemical Corporation - ponsibility." tured. 14-12 in the final game, and he Card Room Allard K. Lowenstein, the se- In regard to the proverbial polls, seemingly had the confidence and Maryland National Bank - Sen- U. S. Navy - Groton - Confer- cond principal speaker, described Lowenstein admitted that they do the momentumtowin. Chamlinwith ate Room ence Room McCarthy's campaign as "in the show that President Johnson has Ms tremendously long reach, re- Portsmouth Naval Shipyard - John Hancock Mutual Life In- tradition of the U.S." McCarthy, a lead over McCarthy. However, turned a Ramseur drop-shot, which Card Room surance Company - Senate Room he said, is waging a campaign he added, these same polls show looked like a winner, and won the Dow Chemical Company - Elton New York Life Insurance Com- directed towards tlie people. He that only 22% of the American point to save defeat. His return Lounge pany - Elton Lounge called it a revolution in Ameri- people believe what Johnson says. seemed to change the complexion Hurdman and Cranstoun - Con- can politics—make it work. The picture across the US is of the match. Both boys played ference Room (Until 4:30) "The American people," said not the Weak picture one gets cautiously while the crowd watch- U. S. Coast Guard OCS - Mather Part-time work on campus: need Lowenstein, "deeply yearn for from reading pundits, saidLowen- ed almost breathlessly. Chamlin TV Lounge approximately 4 students with a peace." America's "hawk" re- stein. "So many people don't want managed to tie the game at 14- knowledge of photography. Job con- putation, he said, is purely my- Johnson that once the ball gets 14. Ramseur decided to play the sists mostly of dark room work. thical. The people, lie claimed, rolling, people will join," he ex- best of five in the overtime. Friday, February 16 Underclassmen preferred. If in- have been led to believe that es- plained. "If we become so cor- In what seemed to be hours, terested, see the Placement Sec- calation is the only way to peace. roded that we, given an honorable nine long rally was ended when Mutual of New York - Elton retary as soon as possible. "We are pursuing an unattain- alternative, reject it, then we are Ramseur barely misplaced a drop- Lounge able goal in Vietnam, damaging our in fact worse than the people we shot and was caught out of posi- Spargue Electric - Conference Pleasant summer job for a relations with everyone in the criticize," he claimed. "The price tion. This made the score 16-14, Room freshman, who knows sailing and world," said Lowenstein. For ex- Johnson must pay," declared Lo- and although Ramseur tried des- Worcester County National is able to teach children, age 7- ample, he pointed out that Gen. wenstein, "is the most thundering perately, he was unable to fight Bank - Card Room 13 is available. See Mr. Butler. Westmoreland claimed two months electoral defeat in history." back. He lost 17-15. It was the hardest lost for any Trinity player . of the year, and great attempt to upset M. I. T. was foiled. On Saturday, the Bantams took out their frustration on Stonj Brook, and clobbered them 0-0. But the rotten taste of the loss could not be completely forgotten. The Frosh team has won two of their last three matches to give them a 2-3 record for the year. After losing to Amherst, the Baby Bantams defeated M.I.T. 7-2. Captain Spencer Knapp led the assualt on M.I.T. by winning 3-1. Other winners were Nick Booth, Bruce Mahaffey, Dave Casey, Dave Brooks, Phil Khoury, and Pete Miller. Charlie Hart won in the number ten spot. The fact that the team has two wins In their first five matches is a great tribute to Coach Mike Moonvl es. Social Dorm... (Continued from Page 1) Lundeen hopes to obtain College Great consent for the experiment, and suggested that those students In- terested in participating would ap- ply for a room next fall in South Campus A. Those choosingtoroom there, he noted, would have to pay a small "token" assessment in order to finance new facilities spot tor and activities. Among- the possibilities for these facilities, • he observed, is con- struction of a recreation room in the dormitory's basement. He sug- gested also that the dorm conduct small social functions, such as in- formal mixers and meetings with faculty members. Already underway is the trans- a sit-in. formation of the A-B study lounge into a small-scale student social center. Both the administration and residents of the dorm contributed toward the purchase of a television set. Lundeen commented that after a short trial run he will attempt to determine student reaction to the project. Not all reaction has been favor- able. John Hagaman '70, a resi- dent in the dormitory, has posted a petition calling the lounge's transformation a "rape", and charging that the question of the And what gleams beneath The center console is television's placement was not You're looking at the democratically resolved. year's sweetest place for that rakish afterdeck? also available, as is the Two telltale flared exhausts clock.'tach/engine gauge Lundeen speculated, however, a sit-in—Olds 4-4-2. This is the scene: that give voice to a Rally Pac that the television did have stu- Louvered hood up front. 400-cube, 4-barrel, 350-hp And with all the new dent approval. The television, he Crisp sculpturing in Rocket V-8. GM safety features, including continued, will not at times be in the rear. Rally Stripe and And look where you energy-absorbing steering ^se, and in those instances the Custom Sport Wheels live: in foam-padded, column, 4-4-2 is the greatest .lounge will be available for study. available in between. bucket-seat comfort. sit-in you ever sat in. . The distinctive feature of the proposed system, he concluded, is. that it enables the students to act as a unit and yet remain in- Olds 4-4-2—one of the youngmobiles from Oldsmobile— dividuals. He asserted that it is named "Top Performance Car of the Year" by CARS Magazine. a compromise between the polar MWIK OF EXCELLENCE social alternatives presently of- fered a student by the College. FEBRUARY 13, 1968 PAGE ' 10 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Meskill Gives Forum Talk; Considers Ways to Dissent

"The right to dissent is as Meskill, is how far can dissent not harm the lives of others, ' American as apple pie," accord- go. He discussed historical re- Meskill stated that the courts ing to U.S. Representative from ferences to dissent which later are open to war protestors and Connecticut, Thomas Meskill '50. he used to prove his point that "op- those who don't want to serve In Meskill, who defeated the incum- position is a basis and strength the military or who burn. their bent Democrat and Trinity pro- of a free society." He commented draft cards. He is against the fessor Stephen Minot, who ran that fiery tempers and hasty Hershey proposal per se, for the on the peace platform of the Amer- actions often take precedence over military was never meant as a ican Independent Movement, to be- moderation. This is especially means of punishment. There are come the state's only Repub- true, he said among the peace too many dedicated men in the lican congressman, spoke at the envoys from America who have military to attempt to dilute it meeting of the Political Forum on gone to North Vietnam to hand with men who are against any February 9. propaganda to the communists, and kind of military service and are As SDS distributed questions then have returned to the U.S. being punished by serving in the to ask the congressman in rela- to tell the U.S. people how "good service. When asked about the tion to the Republican stand on the communists are." recent Spock-Coffin arrests, Mes- Vietnam, Meskill spoke about There are three ways to dis- kill remarked that no group was Greenwich Village's Allen Ginsberg, poet and admitted pot- "Dissent in Free Society." The sent, according to Meskill. ever more "in need of a ped- head, will read from his works at the Gengras Campus Center right of free speech is practiced The first is the court of law, iatrician than the peace move- at the University of Hartford February 26 at 8:30. The contro- and exercised more than any other the second is the ballot box, and ment." versial poet's most popular works include "Howl and Other right, yet free speech never lias the third, revolution. He stated that Meskill favors any move to lower Poems," "Kaddish and Other Poems," and "Reality Sand- brought impunity for all those who revolution is acceptable if no other the voting age to 18, but he is exercise this right. way to deal with a situation is against a declaration of war against wiches." A question and answer session will follow his appear- available and if the revolution will ance, which is free to the public. The question here, accordingto North Vietnam. Air... (Continued from Page 7) Students on this campus who are At John Hancock, in agreement with Dow's outlook toward our involvement in Vietnam are thereby reconciled to Dow's production of napalm. Many of there's more to Life Insurance these students may wish to have a job interview with the Dow recruiter. Any action either on the part of specific campus organiza- tions, or by the college admini- than selling Life Insurance. stration which might in any way interfere with those students who wish to meet and talk with the Dow officials, would constitute a violation of those rights as de- signated in the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. The five universities therefore which have already ban- We'll be here on February 20th ned Dow from their campuses of- fer a sad commentary upon present day interpretations of an indivi- dual's, as well as a company's, to prove it to you. rights of free speech as defined in the Constitution. Last September a team of dis- tinguished American physicians Selling life insurance is big busi- visited Vietnam. In their official report to President Johnson the ness. So big that John Hancock is physicians stated; selling nationwide. So we need "Throughout our visit, indivi- a lot of talented salesmen like dual team members paid particul- Frederick Brown — who can choose ar attention to burns. The cases their own locations. But that's were relatively limited in num- ber in relation to other injuries just the beginning, we also need and we saw no justification for a lot of talented nonsalesmen the undue emphasis which had like Alan Smith and Charles Grier been placed by the press upon for positions as: civilian burns caused by napalm." At San.Francisco State College, during a week-long series of de- computer programmers bates entitled "War Crisis Con- Alan Smith works in our Salary Ad- vocation", the right of the Dow ministration Division in Boston. Alan And mathematicians. Chemical Company to recruit on earned his B.A. from Harvard in 1965. their campus was discussed. In And accountants. the course of that week the local And researchers. chapter of the Students for a De- - mocratic Society issued a flyer And management trainees. which declared, "We favor dis- And people to manage these cussing issues on which students can ultimately make decisions and people. on which students can act," And people to manage the A disheartening -characteristic" of. the shows itself in whole business. (Presidents the relation between the SDS flyer are made, not bom.) quoted above and tliose activities Frederick Brown, Jr. graduated from the Military College which they have directed against You'll 'find that no matter what your in 1964. Rick is a Sales Representative the Dow Chemical Company. There at the Mordecai Gerson Agency, appears under the surface of the degree will be, John Hancock Philadelphia. constitutionally • detrimental probably has a career for you. "Dow-Day" demonstrations, the The John Hancock recruiter will be hazy inner motivations of a move- hereto see you. ment which seems to have driven itself to action simply for the Check your college placement office sake of action, regardless pf the consequences. Throughout his- for details. • tory action has been used as a means of achieving unification . within movements* and the New Left apparently, offers no except- ion to the rule. , Trinity students, it may be Charles Gnerisa management trainee in the Policy Contract Service Depart- LIFE INSURANCE hoped, will.refrain from following ment in Boston. Chuck graduated in in the mistaken footsteps of our 1966 from Tuskegee Institute. colleagues at San Francisco State, .the University, of , and An Equai Opportunity Employer .Harvard; to . name only a few, ; ;Fpr, the "Dow-Day" protests can only be viewed as misdirected at-, .tempts in the search'for profound, '.}.effective,- opposition to war. , FEBRUARY 13, 1968 THE TRINITY TRIPOD THE TRINITY SKIER

s( Editor's Note: The Sporting be Sugarloafers Ski Dorm, a co- Wilmington, Vermont's Hay- "f Pages Ski learn tools North ed establishment that costs $5 stack Mountain is one of the East's this week to explore the whys sleeping bag style a night with lesser known ski resorts. This meals, or $5.50 with sheets. Other and ivherefores of Sugarloaf and fact alone enhances its value. Al- inexpensive places are the Red though it is only six miles from Haystack. Any useful tidbits Stallion Inn and Chateau des the more popular Mt. Snow, its of entertainment o j slope in- life lines are about half as long. formation you would like to Haystack, being in the center of add to our swelling journal of This Week: a natural snowbowl, also has the ski knowledge would be en- longest possible ski season in ' thusiasticallv received:) Vermont. Sugarloaf, Lift tickets at Haystack are al- Maine skiing is undoubtedly at so cheaper than surrounding ar- ; its best at Sugarloaf Mountain in Haystack eas, ($7 as compared to $7.50 Kingfield. Six hours from "Hart- and $8) another advantage. In ad- ford, it may well be worth it. dition skiing at Haystack is on a Sugarloaf has a gondola which Tagues, while Sugarloaf Inn and par with any area in the East. serves 37 miles of trails in ad- Sugarloaf Motel are more expen- There are 22 miles of uncrowded dition to five T-bars serving 45 sive places. slopes that will test the expert acres of snowfields. The cost is For night life, the best place as well as give a beginner con- $7.50 for all lifts or $4.50 for to find a girl and a beer is the fidence. Haystack is also plan- T-bars alone. The best slopes Red Stallion, which features beer ning to add, in addition to their appear to be: (not strict on proof), a jug band, two chairlifts, a gondola that will \ Narrow Guage — A steep, tough and dancing. In addition, the Red cover the entire mountain. expert trail that usually has excel- Stallion is run by and for people The apres-ski activity, pr rath- under thirty, other good places lent snow conditions; er the lack of it, seems to be Slicing Virgin Snow in Vermont Widowmaker, Been Auger--Ex- to find a single snow bunny and the only real disadvantage of Hay- pert slopes similar to Narrow a quick hot buttered rum are the stack. Although there are 100 in. Guage; Sugarloaf Sauna (coed with drinks) the Haystack vicinity, they are as Tote Road -- Three miles of and Kora's Inn, located in nearby expensive as any located in civ- not too tough, bread, versatile Eustus. Chateau des Tagues and ilized areas. Inns near the Mt. Racquets Fall to MIT, 5-4; made for the advanced intermed- Sugarloaf Inn feature dancing, Snow area seem to be the best iate; while Sugarloaf Motel and the Riv- bet for a short evening flame. Snow Fields -- This area sports erside Inn have bars only. Haystack is only two hours from Crile, Hayward Gain Upsets 45 acres open headwall and snow To reach Sugarloaf, take the Hartford, so one day trips are not that is forty feet deep by April; Maine Turnpike (95) to Augusta out of the picture. To reach Hay- by Chuck Wright and then Route 27 to Kingfield. Sugarloaf also has some fairly stack take 1-91 north to Brattle- It was a busy week for the regain his poise. He fought back, inexpensive, but comfortable lodg- bore and switch exit two (West- squash teams as the Varsity Ban- however, and won the last two ' ing. The best place appears to Rte. 9) to Route 100. Then turn tams dropped two out of three games by the narrow margins of right to Haystack and. good, un- .-•- matches and the Baby s^uad won 15-12 and 17-15. crowded skiing. one of two. The big match of the Hayward's match was even more week was the 5-4 loss to a strong dramatic. He lost his first game M. I. T. team. 15-3, but came right back 15-7. Trying- to bounce back from a 9-0 Then, after exchanging games, 00 defeat at the hands of Amherst, Hayward dominated the final game OLD CAVE earlier in the week the varsity 15-7. Hayward's win along with went into the contest against M.I.T. the win's of Bob Harrity and Pete determined to avenge an 8-1 loss Campbell gave Trinity a 4-2 lead December 9th to them. The Ban- in the overall score. Only one CAFE tams knew that they had an im- proved club, and they were out (Continued on Page 9 to pjjovo ^•-— ". George Crile and Malcolm Hay- Intramurals... ward provided the early excite- a week or more TRINITY SHOE ment by upsetting Wong and Tan- (Continued from Page 12) tivit respectively. Both M.I.T. op- Pike recovered from tills setback SERVICE ponents had lost but one match to annex the volley ball title by AS HUNDREDS all year and were highly ranked out dueling Phi Kappa Psi, 2-1, OF COLLEGE GUYS Good OPEN FOR BUSINESS in New England. Crile and Hay- in the final match. Feb. 7, 1968 ward had to fight from behind to Basketball is now in progress AND GALS HAVE Humor win. with Crow and the Independents SUMMERTIMES 241 Zion St. Crile won his first game in possessing the big guns. AXP's Ice Cream Joseph F. Si pa la overtime 17-14, but was battered Blackbirds lace Frosh North in with... in the second game 15-2 by an the winners bracket of the Amer- Prop. aroused Wong. Since Wong com- ican League in the double eli- pletely dominated the second game, mination tournament while the In- it was doubtful whether Crile could dependents, encounter Phi Kappa Psi in the National League. Yes, you put Upcoming attractions include Anyone can squash and swimming before the in lots of hours spring recess. Ensuing the vaca- but... tion, the. more leisurely events of golf, soffball, and track will take place. Hopefully the fog surround- ing the tennis results will also be cleared up. As of today, the overall stand- sings through four sports are; Sigma Nu, 254; Pi Kappa Alpha, 252; Phi Kappa Psi, 231; Alpha Chi Rho, 221; Independents. 219; Delta Phi. 218; Phi Mu Delta, 210; Bronwell, 203; Fresh South, GOOF. 202; Frosh North, 200; Delta Psi, With Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper, you You're trained and work on routes where people have 200; Theta Xi, 200; Psi Upsiolon, can erase that goof without a trace. 160; Delta Kappa Epsilon, 150; and bought Good Humor Ice Cream for years ... no in- Alpha Delta Phi, 88, vestment . . , everything supplied. Not a telltale smudge remains. A special surface per- mits quick and easy erasing with an ordinary pencil HOW YOU QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW eraser. For perfect papers every time, get Corrasable. 1. Minimum age 18. In light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In H & L PACKAGE STORE 2. Need a valid driver's license ... and must be able handy 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. to drive a clutch transmission. At Stationery Departments. 3. Be in good physical condition. 219 ZION STREET Sign Up Now For Our Campus Visit HARTFORD, CONN. Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid 06106 Ofticer to schedule you for our campus visit or write to: Tel. 247-9138 GOOD HUMOR, Dept. A. 800 Sylvan Avenue Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 Closest Package store INTERVIEW Only Eaton makes Corrasable. to College. DATE: March 6 J EATON PAPER CORPORATION, PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS An Equal opportunity Employer (M/.F) . • . , . . FEBRUARY 13, 'AGE 12 THE TRINITY TRIPOD Jeffs Snap String... First Time Ever... Aqua-cubs Surprise Frosh Dribblers Split; ML Herman, 49-46 Pass Preppies? 72-64 With the aid of a bold gamble relays, and decided to try to win After a stunning 100-99 over- on Wednesday. Forty minutes la- by Coach diet McPhee, the Trin- the meet before the final event, time upset of the Yale Frosh, ter, hopes for an unbeaten sea- ity frosh swimmers snapped a the 400-yard freestyle relay. If Trinity's freshman basketball son had vanished, as the Lord streak Saturday that had begun Trin did not have 48 points after Jeffs won, 100-85. the tenth event, the 100- team was bound to come down to before they were born, toppling Mt. earth, but no one, expected them Tlermon, 49-46. Psyched up by yard breaststroke, Mt. Hermon a surprise loss to Canterbury last would extend its unbroken string to to crash land, The Baby Bants, Saturday, and the total destruction nineteen years. who had won eight straight, lost Tankers Even their first game of the year at of Westminster, 62-33, on Wed- The 200-yard medley relay nesday, the frosh turned in some team, Mitch Hankin, Chris Knight, Amherst, 100-85, and almost their of the best swimming of Hie year. Gary McKenzie, and Jim Graves second to Westminster Prep. Record With f A combination of impartially For Mt/ Hermon, McPhee, for breezed home in 1:50.1. Bob Hurst the first time this year, dropped and Mark Hastings, swept the 200- HUSTLING HOWIE Green- poor officiating and sloppy shoot- Two Defeats the strategy of trying to take both yard freestyle. Peter Dodd turned ing and passing by Trinity al- blatt, who scored 31 points most cost the yearlings their se- in a first in the 50-yard free- in the Baby Bantams only The Blue and Gold tankers drop- style, with Graves finishing third, cond loss of the year at the hands ped meets to Springfield, 64-31, When Ward Godsall splashed home loss, to Amherst, 100-85, of an inspired Westminster Prep handles the ball in two of and M.I.T., 57-38, in eveningthsir Jeffs, Tufts alone in the individual medley with team. Usual Bantam stalwarts season record at 3 wins and 3 his lowest time of the year, a his better moments in the Howie Greenblatt and Tom Sasali losses. After hosting powerful sparkling 2:22.2, Trinity went into Frosh's near-loss to West- were having bad days from the Amherst, defending New England Bomb Bants the diving with 2G points, and the minster, 72-64, Saturday. floor, in addition, theWestminster champion, tomorrow night (8 McPhee timetable was right on Greenblatt, a graduate of Hart- team was shooting well from the o'clock) , in Trowbridge Nata- schedule when the diving began. ford's Weaver High, is the outside, and when missing, grab- torium, the squad will visit tough Lou Birinyi, Trin Diver, bing rebounds away from Ron (but less tough) rivals Union, Feb- team's top playmaker and one Nussbaum, and shooting again. 78-52;97-87 rose to the occasion with of its leading scorers, Coach ruary 20th, and Tufts, February 162.55, 4 points over Mt. ller- Charlie Young pumped in 16 27th. The Bantams remained winless V/ilson's Frosh swing into points from the outside in the first rnon, and in the surprise of the Mike Wright, junior sprinter, in nine road contests this year meet, things looked a lot better. action here tonight at 6:30 half to give the Preppies a 28- as the quintet dropped games to against Wesleyan before the 30 halftime lead over a lethargic provided the only radiance revived Amherst, 78-02, and Tufts, Godsall added three more in the in Springfield's archaic "Bath- 100-yard butterfly, Hastings fin- less-likely varsity takes over. Trinity team. • 97-87, last week. The Bantams attempted to close tub" pool last Tuesday, as he won Trinity now returns home to face ished a strong second in the 100- \ the 60 - and 100-yard freestyle yard freestyle, and Mitch Han- the gap in the second half, taking a tough Weslyean five tonight. The away Westminster's outside shots events and anchored the winning [ Hilltoppers displayed some im- kin turned in a point for 100- 400-yard freestyle relay. I yard backstroke. With 38 points, and giving them driving layups. proved play at Tufts. Hopefully Sasali began to hit for the Ban- Hosting MIT on Saturday, the t this drive will produce Trinity's Bob Hurst breezed in the 400- Bantams leaped to a gallant but j yard freestyle, and noliody was tams, scoring 13 points in the per- third conquest in its lGth engage- iod. Trinity came back, but still short-lived lead by , setting new ment. . . , close to Chris Knight, in the pool and Varsity records in the 100-yard breaststroke. To make trailed, 62-60, with four minutes Amherst combined precise left. 400-yard medley relay with a shooting and strong rebounding in the screaming louder, Bill Rich- clocking of *:54,5. Captain Bill smothering the. Bantams Wednes- ards took third to Knight. At this point, Coach Joe Wil- Bacon (backstroke) was joined by day. The Hilltoppers fell behind With 40 points, the relay team, son put Nussbaum, who had been Phil Davis (breaststroke), Seth 38-21 at the intermission and never consisting of three football play- playing poorly all game, back into Merriman (butterfly), and Mike recovered. ers and a distance man, could and action. Trinity seemed to catch fire Wright (freestyle) in the victory. Although each team attempted 60 did, lose. at this point, as the Bantams reel- Unfortunately Trin only managed shots at the bucket,- the Lord Jeffs Chet McPhee had beaten Mt. led off 12 points, six by Nuss- two more first place finishes - pumped in 34 while Trinity Hermon for the first time, and baum, to only two for the Prep- Bacon's 2:14.4 200-yard back- managed just 1G. as lie looked up from the pool pies to defeat a determined West- stroke and the 400-yard free- The Jeffs employed superior into which he had been thrown, lie minster quintet, 72-64. style relay (Bacon, Ric Hendee, muscle to snatch most of the_stray_ could say only, "This isn't the team Merriman, Wright) as MIT slam- Trinity shots in out bounding the ^-cisfca4-its-«ate«a*eBr«-a--rmed--'iour-events to cement the Hartford club, 50-36. With a little luck, it might not be the streak against its final "tough" victory ;arid • up their record to Peter DePrez and Jim Stuhlman team that loses to Hotchkiss today opponent of the year at Amherst 5-4. paced the'Bantam attack by sinking 15 and 13 markers, respectively. Las_L Saturday Trinity provided "Its' opponents, Tufts, with stiffer .competition but came away from Boston on the short end of the score, 97-87. The Bantams again slipped be- hind in the early going allowing the Tufts Jumbos to grab a 49- 32 half-time margin. Even though ' Trinity swished 55 tallies in the second half, they had permitted the Jumbos too big a cushion. The Hilltoppers.once more took the same number of shots at the hoop as their foes, 71, but allowed Tufts to dutgun them 40 to 36. DePrez again spearheaded the offense with 28 markers while Stuhlman followed closely with 23 points and 15 rebounds. Pete Clark, threw in 17 points after the intermission to finish with 19. . .•'••. Nu Leading fntermurals WANTS YOU! The intramural campaign to un- seat Alpha Chi Rho as king of the jocks has hit the midway mark. He's your Fidelity Man On Campus. While tennis standings still re- And he wants you to consider a mains somewhat. of a mystery, final tabulations in football, challenging career opportunity with bowling, ping-pong, and volley ball The Fidelity, reveal, that Sigma Nu holds a slim two point lead over Pi KappaAipna So come see him when he's on 254 to 252. campus and talk,things over. . The football title was captured by Delta Phi when, it ambushed Check your Placement Officer for Sigma Nu, 13-0, last fall. further details. In more recent, events, Sigma Nu ran away with the bowling tournament byaveragingl75 among Wednesday, Feniwy 21 is mm Day its four members. Alpha Chi Rho slid into second ahead of the us- ually powerful Independents. , , Phi Mu Delta netted the ping- pong championship by bounding The Fidelity Pi Kappa Alpha; in a head-to- • Mutual Life Insurance Company, Phila., Pa. 19101 ihead struggle. • 88 years of service Ufe/Health/Groctp/Pensions/Annuities ]' ; (Continued on Page 11)