TRINITY NEWS GOWNS, HOODS, CASSOCKS, BLAZERS from 3 CHURCH LANE COLLEGE GREEN DIXON a Dublin University Weekly HEMPENSTALL BRYSON 111 IIRAFTON ST
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Tailoring Under the supervimon of our London-trained cutter TRINITY NEWS GOWNS, HOODS, CASSOCKS, BLAZERS from 3 CHURCH LANE COLLEGE GREEN DIXON A Dublin University Weekly HEMPENSTALL BRYSON 111 IIRAFTON ST. THURSDAY, JUNE 7th, 1962 LTD. w- PRICE THREEPENCE Geology Expedition Fashion Winners to lake part June 6th was the sunniest Trinity Wednesday in years, and whilst the hats were affected a little by a fresh in World Research wind, the afternoon was sartorially spectacular. HE three Trinity students who are going to Kharg Chris Lea (see this week’s Island, in the Persian Gulf, leave Dublin July 9th. profile), as Secretary of Trinity T Week, welcomed the President, Chris Kendall, the leader; Jalik Kaulback and Patrick Mr. de Valera, and other distin- Skipwith, have been arranging the expedition for three guished guests in the exclusive years, and its findings will be Trinity’s contribution to an Pavilion. international research programme planned by, amongst Hats this year were generally others, Imperial COllege, London. larger, and bad bl’ims, as opposed to last year, when hats tended, so The principal object of the is as fantastic as its history. It is to speak, to the conical. expedition is to ascertain the scheduled to become a vital deep Ushering in Trinity Week---an impression of that climax of the The winners of the competition sea harbour for extensive oil age of the island. There has Summer Term, Trinity Wednesday. were:-- tanker traffic from Persia and Iran Photo by D. Harman also been a significant drop of to the rest of the world. l--Etain YardleT. sea level, and the expedition 2--Rosemary Fisher. hopes to discover whether Manta Rays and Sharks. 3--Cat herine Nesbitt. All three members are experi- this is due to " a tectonic rise enced aqua lung divers, and will JOYCE HONOURED of the island, o1" an enstatic The 1st prize is a 3-month spend as much time as possible modelling course at Charles Ward- fall of sea level." studying underwater life there. HIS month Ireland will, been promised on loau from the Mills Modelling Agency; 2nd prize, Jalik Kaulbak, the expedition’s Pearl Beds and Crusaders. T for the first time, United States. dinner for two at the Royal cameraman, knows the island, and Later in the evening, and for the Hibernian Hotel; 3rd prize is a honour her famous week following, "Bloomsday," an The expedition is not confined he believes that the waters around writer, James Joyee, when beauty treatment by Helena its coast may hold many unidenti- adaptation of "Ulysses" by Alan to geological aspects of Kharg the Martello Tower at Sandy- McClellan will be staged at the Rubenstein at Browne Thomas. fied species of nmrine life. He island. The team will be there for cove, in which the first sc~ne Eblana Theatre, Dublin; a week’s The competition judges were:-- also hopes to make extensive fihns series of lectures on Joyce will be three months, and in that time of " Ulysses" is set, will be Miss G. Kenny, Charles Ward of sharks and rays in the vicinity. given at the Building Centre, they hope to learn more about its opened as a commemorative Mills and David Butler. history, the underwater life around I]luseUlll. its coast, and the traditions of its At the beginning of next The opening ceremony will itihabitants. Kharg once had world be performed on Saturday at famous pearl beds; in its time it term there will be a number of vacancies on the staff of 3 p.m., by Miss Sylvia Beach, tlas had colonies of Zoroastrians who p u b 1 i s h e d Joyce’s Grafton Shoe and Nestorian Christians; there are " Trinity News." Students "Ulysses" in 1922 from her Crusaders tombs on the island. who would like to acquaint Shakespeare mid Company Until tiffs decade the islanders had themselves with practical publishing house in Paris, and Salon never seen wheeled transport of who is coming over specially any kind. Its potential importance newspaper work should contact any member of for the event. 5 Grafton Street The Tower Museum will have it staff’, or leave a note in the number of Joyce menlemtos on dis- Believe it or Not "Trinity News" box in play--among them the deathmask No. 3. of the writer which was made in For Everything that’s Department Zurich 21 years ago. There will also be a number of portraits and new and Lovely in The nmmmified body of a drawings of Joyce. There will be youngish, fair-haired man, clad in khaki trousers and shirt of the type some first editions, a number of Ladies footwear worn by members of the British personal belongings and, it is Army around 1920, was discovered tonight hoped, at least one manuscript of 5% Discount on Student’s Cards by turf workers between two and one of his major works, which has three feet under the surface .of Mounttown Bog, Geevagh, Co. S!igo. 8.15 The body is believed to be that of John Watt, an Englishman and Entertain a member of the British Forces, who was captured by the I.R.A. in Exam Hall BROWN THOMAS Geevagh district around 1920, at the court-marshalled and put to death for activities as a spy. Choral Society " h’ish Times," Wed., June ~. is all things FOR L() / l ’~ /:’.dT’Z~5 "TAB|RNA" to all ’l’elephone 43198 :,~ 1.r. (rConnelt st. GREEK RESTAURANT Dubliners Dining . Dancing . ¯ Nightly . Table d’Hote ) James joyce in Paris at the turn of Dinner and a la Carte the century¯ /’5-. BREAD ¯ . No Cover Charge... l_)uhlh,, by t’rofcss,)’..’ llichard Kain. Licensed to Nidnight . l’aidric C,)lum,. Niaii Mont~omery. and Cakes J,,bn Gar\’il~. Dr. A. J. Levonthal Informal Dress .... ahd l;r. l-ileen McCarville. LUNCHEONS D A I L Y, Made I~:," During the w,,ok students ftom GRAFTON STREET U.C.1). ",’.ill pay tribute to their 12.30-3 p.m. and ,:olleg,"s famous graduate by giv- Johnston, N looney & O’Bricn Ltd. hm readings of selected pass:,,zes METROPOLE _\~;’,a’cl(’tl h":dl Championship (’up for BEST Loaf DUKE STREET, DUBLIN from " Ulysses." "Fh,~ x.,-e[~-k~i~),.’,-]~ Irish act,~!’. Cyril (’u~ack, will also ;Iml (hI’ev l.~t Prizes at tilt" International Exhibition, give rea,li~a< (,.’,)m " Fim>,gan’~ O’Conn~ll St., DUBLIN l,ondon, V’," :~ !,:,,.’¯ !: nelly’s two pieces seems to me to hit off the quintessential note which he is trying to strike. "Good Tt TRINITY NEWS Friday" was written with convic- Icarus tion but the words fail to come A Dublin University Weekly alive. The middle section of Gerald HE ,editorial fez" this Cohen’s " Final Solution" hangs Last tern Vol. IX THURSDAY, 7th JUNE, 1962 No. 18 The drawings by Fred Middle- fire in the rhythm, but the poem This arti, T terms " Icarus is full hurst are unmitigatedly goes out in a blaze of glory in the taken pl: dreadful. last four lines. " Stone Throw" Chairman : of good ideas. As an by J~ohn Stevens Wade is a much introduction to an illustrated Ironically, they illustrate Mr. more modest poem; quiet, con- Norman Sowerby. Eckersley’s sh,m~c story, which I trolled and well judged, with an edition, Richm’d Eckersley echo of Eliot in the last line. I Vice-Chairman: enjoyed for its disturbing picture analyses lucidly the function of a mother-son relationship. Both found Deborah de Vere White’s Godfrey Fitzsimons. short stotLy undistinguished, but " LP lna of the illustrator and his re- it and " Chingo " steer well dear her poetry is largely the genuine article. " Death of Pompey" is et la bo E ditors: lationship to the writer, and of sentimentality to which their subjects make them particularly written with a fine feeling for the si elle n Natalie Spencer, Roger Scott-Taggart, Alan Jones. discusses magazine design and overall movement of a poem, the layout. In practice, however, liable. Damian Ryan’s " The last two stanzas rising to a climax Business Managers: Affair " depends almost entirely on which is very satisfying to read things do not work out so well. tension between subject matter and aloud. The opposite is true of Hugh White, D~smond Herman, John Cox, The drawings by Diana Hors- style and makes you wonder Michael Longley’s " In Touch" Colin Smythe. fall come nearest to fulfilling whether this so.rt of thing is not a which seems to lose assurance at dead end, but its effect on the the beginning of the last stanza. Mr. Eckersley’s ideas. The~. " Completely," however, shows him Secretary : reader is certainly spectacular, it one an( have a liveliness and sly is beautifully balanced and is in at his best. Derek Mahon’s con- Christopher Smith. some ways the m.ost perfect thing tribution is uneven ranging from they t~ observation which comple- in the magazine. There are two a tr~mslation .of Corbiere which articles: The one on Holl,~vood by reads magnificently, th r ou gh uncert~ ments well the freshness of Charles Burr is interesting and " Poete Maudit," which only just the story they illustrate. The readable, but " hnage And After avoids caricature in s~)ite of its wrote various fish, seagulls, etc., Image," by Peter Stone--a hecti- sense of humour, but is powerful tween OUR scattered over the pages are cally .rushed guided tour of English all the same, to " Out of the nsually satisfying in them- book illustration which manages to Depths " which is technically sick Alo-eri~ mention " Punch," The Folio unto death in places: selves, but in fact all they do Society, Blake, Picasso, Aleuin of " And also the dull cancerous fear the rea is fill up spaces that were York and many other wonders--is In our bones ,of being left with The gc 0WN TRUMPET blank in previous "Icari." too general for anyone who is Nothin~ to think about but our already interested, and assumes too Bodies and how ugly they are." Januar Surely the layout and typo- much for anyone who is not.