THE
TRINITY IVY 1971 The Ninety-Eighth Year of Publication
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Trinity College is a place for believers, for these are the men who are doers. Trinity College is a place of opportunities, for a liberal education is a venture, not a fixed frontier. Trinity College is a place of values and high expectations, for these mark the educated man. That man, the one who is educable and eager to test hi capabilities, is the one we seek. That man, the one who has the character and determination to manage himself, is the one we invite to membership in this community. To him, we extend the resources of a liberal education, in and for his time.
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Trinity is "new land." Wherever you have been before, whatever you have done, be prepared for pathfinding. Be ready to discover new knowledge and be ready to go as deep and as far as your capacity will permit. Be ready to meet men you have never met before, from places you have never been. Above all, be ready to discover yourself, the first step to wisdom. We will ask that you work hard and think hard, that you attempt things you have never attempted before. The liberal arts are not only the wisdom of the past, but the source of ideas for the future.
That urge for excellence is unmistakable in Trinity's aims. Whatever else may be done, we expect that you will learn to take a firm hand in shaping and directing your own life. Mankind is nothing without individual man. It is not our purpose to train technicians, but to produce men of quality. It is not our wish to entertain a bright bystander, but to ask of you the deepest involvement, intellectual and emotional, of which you are capable, then to encourage you to share 路 that experience with others. Trinity is not a place for those who withhold their talents for tomorrow, but for those who will spend them today. Thi a1m sets the tone of Trinity.
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You may wonder if, and when, you will encounter superb teachers, the scholars, the personalities, th~ men who inspire students and make education an unforgettable and deeply personal experience. The Trinity answer is: immediately, and continuously, throughout your academic life on this campus. You get to know your teachers well. They teach for the most part in small classes and seminars. They are readily accessible outside the classroom for consultation. Many live near, and all have offices on the campus. Senior faculty, many of them department heads, teach freshmen, as well as the upperclassmen.
We believe that the educated man must also be the moral man, that he must have standards for himself, first, before he can fulfill the role of leadership and inspiration to others. These standards are the individual man's great inner strength. To this end, Trinity College draws the student into active expression of faith and fellowship at numerous points in his college life. A college student seeks an intellectual foundation for his faith. At Trinity, the acceptance of free inquiry, responsiveness to the critical mind, and the acceptance of selfcriticism are the ways students gain freedom and truth. "EDUCATIO
FOR YOUR TIME"
The Office of Admissions Trinity College, 1967
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SENIORS
Biology DR. JAMES M. VAN STONE, Chairman
PETER WINSLOW ADAMS
NORMAN MAX APRILL
JOHN BOYNTON AYRES
Upper Montclair, New Jersey Montclair Academy
Rockville Center, New York Southside Senior High School
Springfield, Massachusetts Cathedral High School
IVY; Junior Advisor; Crew, Freshman and Varisty; Soccer, Freshman and Varsity; Psi Upsilon
Band, President; Hillel Society; Orchestra, President; Phi Kappa Psi; Baseball, Freshman and Varsity; Squash, Freshman
EDWIN ALLEN BOWE Jefferson City, Missouri Conard High School
Revitalization Corps; Young Republicans
ANTHONY JOSEPH CASTAGNO West Hartford, Connecticut Northwest Catholic High School
JAMES ARTHUR CHESNEY Fairfield, Connecticut Newington High School
Chess Club; Intramural Board; Golf; Soccer, Freshman and Varsity; Sigma Nu
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BRUCE MELVIN DERRICK Manchester, Connecticut Manchester High School
Comparative Assistant
Anatomy
Laboratory
GARY ROBERT DIBBLE Waterbury, Connecticut Crosby High School
Newman Club; Swimming, Freshman
DR.
J. WENDELL BURGER 13
DENNIS CHARLES FRIEDMAN
MICHAEL TIFFANY GILLETTE
Great Neck, New York Great eck North Senior High School
Niagara Falls, ew York DeVeaux School
Big Brother Program; Fencing; Alpha Chi Rho
Young Republicans, Kappa Alpha
JOHN EDGAR GRIGGS, JR
SUSAN GRACE HAINES
JOHN JOSEPH JEHL
Wilmington, Delaware Tower Hill School
West Hartford, Connecticut Conard High School
orth Caldwell, ew Jersey West E sex High School
ARLENE ANN FORASTIERE Springfield, Massachusetts Classical High School
Junior Advisor; Adjudicative Panel
FEC; Junior Advisor; Revitalization Corps; Football, Freshman; Phi Kappa Psi, Vice-President
President;
Pi
Junior Advisor; Swimming, Freshman; Sigma Nu, President
DAVID RICHARD KIARSIS DR DONALD B. GALBRAITH
South Dartmouth, Massachusetts Suffield Academy
Football, Freshman and Varsity; Swimming, Freshman; Track, Freshman and Varsity; Sigma u
THEODORE JOSEPH KOWALSKI Willimantic, Connecticut Windham High School
Acolytes; Crucifers; Lay Reader; IVY, Senior Section Editor, Editor-inChief; Pi Kappa Alpha, MC
DR. FRANK M. CHILD, III
Biology IRA PAUL MICHAELSON Andover, Ma sachusetts Hebron Academy
Hillel Society, Secretary-Treasurer; Swimming, Freshman; RAFI; Student Speakers' Bureau; Dean Selection Committee
MARK JAY MITTENTHAL
PETER MICHAEL MOORE
ROBERT HENRY OSHER
Great Great
San Diego, California Wade Hampton High School
Cincinnati, Ohio Walnut Hills High School
Junior Advisor; WRTC-FM, Executive Producer, Station Manager; Theta Xi
Intramural Board; TCC; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Senate; Theta Xi; Phi Beta Kappa
eck, New York eck orth Senior High School
Football, Freshman and Varsity; Lacros e, Freshman; Alpha Chi Rho
WILLIAM DURRIE PREVO T Shre wsbury, New Jer ey The Pin gry S hool
Trin idad ; Football, r shman; Lacro e, re hman and \ ar ity; Swimming, Freshman and arsi ty; Alpha Chi Rho
DR. ROBERT H. BREWER
Biology GARY DA \ ID ROSEN Dalton, G orgia Baylor chool
Cho t Shirt o iety; 1 Club; Golf; Phi Kappa Psi, Trea urer
ARTHUR JACK ROSS, III
LOUIS NELSON SLOCUM, III
Mama ron eck, e w York Rye Country Da y School
East Hartford, Connecticut Pe nney High School
Mather Hall Board of Governor ; WRTC-FM; Football, Fre hman and Varsity; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Delta Phi
Connecticut Intercollegiate Student Legislature; WRTC-FM ; IKA
JOSEPH ROY SMITH, II Holden, Ma achusetts Sa int Martis School
olf, Freshman and Var ity Co-captain
RICHARD BRITTON THOMSO , JR. aginaw, Michigan Dee rfield Academy
Medu a; Re itali za tio n orps; TRIPOD; Bas ball, Fre hm路 n and ar ity apt in ; P i Ups ilo n
MRS. SONYA E. SYDORAK
LAWRE TOM
WAH-CHA
Honolulu, Ba, a ii Punahou hool
Re italization Corps; Bureau; Theta Xi
pea kers '
GEORGE EUCE E WCISLO DR. RICHARD B. CRAWFORD
Hartford, Connecticut Hartford High School
occer, Fr shman
DR. ROBERT H. SMELLIE, JR., Chairman
Chemistry
CRIST NICHOLAS FILER
HUGH BOYD WOODRUFF
Windsor, Connecticut Windsor High School
Watchung, New Jersey Watchung Hill Regional High School
Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Pi Sigma
Intramural Board; Sigma Pi Sigma; IKA
DR. JAMES K. HEEREN
~ DR. RALPH 0. MOYER, JR.
DR. HENRY A. DEPHILLIPS, JR.
Chemistry DR. RICHARD D. BARNES
DR. EDWARD BOBKO
DR. JOHN C. WILLIAMS, Chairman
Classics
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DR. A THO Y
. MACRO
JOSEPH BOOTHROYD EWBANK Hendersonville, North Carolina Christ School
Acolytes; Chapel Choir; Crucifers; Lay Reader
DR. JAMES R. BRADLEY
LEO CHARLES FARRENKOPF, JR.
WILLIAM CHARLES GRANVILLE
WILLIAM RUSSELL PAGE, JR.
Teaneck, New Jersey Saddle River Country Day School
Lloyd Harbor, ew York Saint Peter's Preparatory School
Winnetka, Illinois Lake Forest Academy
Chess Club, President; Kappa; Phi Mu Delta
Crew, Freshman; Phi Mu Delta
Chapel Choir; Glee Club
Phi .B eta
DR. RICHARD SCHEUCH, Chairman
Economics
CHRISTIAN KRAFT DAHL
LESLYE DAVIS
New London, Connecticut New London High School
Colorado Springs, Colorado Cheyenne Mountain High School
Atheneum; Crown Investment League, Chairman; Matrix Fund, Chairman; Phi Mu Delta, Treasurer
Theta Xi
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THOMAS RICHARD DIBENEDETTO Everett, Massachusetts Everett High School
AIESEC; Crown Investment League; Economics Club; Intramural Board; Base ball, Freshman; Football; Freshman and Varsity; Pi Gamma Mu
LOWEN KASSNER HANKIN Abington, Pennsylvania Abington High School
Crown Investment League; Hillel Society, Vice-President; Jesters; Senate; WRTC-FM; College Financial Board; Phi Mu Delta, Vice-president; Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Beta Kappa
MR. FRANCIS J. EGAN
DR. WARD S. CURRAN 25
MITCHELL ROBERT HANKIN Melrose Park, Pennsylvani a Chelten ham High School
Senate; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity; Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Kappa Alpha
DR. ROBERT A. BATTIS
JAY TABB HOSTETTER Hanover, Pennsylvania Saint And rew's School
Alpha Chi Rho
RICHARD HENRY SCHAEFER Da rien, Connecticut Darien High School
FEC; Student Activities Fund, Treasurer; Junior Advisor; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Senate, Treasurer; Crew, Junior Vari sty and Var ity; Theta Xi, Treasurer
DR. LEROY DUNN
Economics
VICTORIA LOU SCHOTT New York, ew York The Hewitt School
AIESEC; Cerberus; Tennis, Varsity; St Anthony Hall
GEORGE WILLIAM SCHWERT, III Lexington, Kentucky Sayre School
Crown Investment League, VicePresident; Economics Club; Pi Gamma Mu; IKA, Treasurer
HOWARD WEINBERG New York City, ew York DeWitt Clinton High School
Crew, Junior Varsity; Swimming, Freshman; Football, Freshman and Varsity
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THOMAS ROGER BRIGGS Manchester, Connecticut Manchester High School
Sigma Pi Sigma
MR. AUGUST E. SAPEGA, Acting Chairman
Engineering
PIETER JAMES CRUSON MR. THEODORE R. BLAKESLEE, II
Easton, Connecticut Joel Barlow High School 29
MARIETTE STARR BADGER Greenwich, Conn cticut Ro mary Hall High School
DR.
J. BARD MCNULTY, Chairman
English CHRISTOPHER HART BAKER Newca tie, Maine Pomfret School
Al E EC; Glee Club
GREGORY ALAN BEEDY Lexington, Massachu etts Le ington High School
AIESEC, Treasurer; FEC; Delta Kappa Epsilon, Treasurer; Golf
MARGARET HALE CLEMENT Buffalo,
ew York We tover School
Jun ior Advi or; TRIPOD
BRUCE EDWARD COLMA Berkeley, California Berkeley High School
New Collegiate jazz Band ; Trinity Brass En 路emble; I Y
ROBERT FREEMAN DAVIDSON West Hartford, Connecticut The Robinson School
PETER WILLIAM DEVINE
ROBERT BRYAN FAWBER
Pleasantville, New York Pleasan tville High School
West Hartford, Connecticut Hall High School
IVY; TRIPOD
Intramural Board; Golf; Soccer, Freshman and Varsity; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Pi Kappa Alpha, Secretary, Vice-President, and President
AIESEC; Chapel Committee ; Croquet Society; IVY; Young Republicans, Treasurer; Pi Kappa Alpha
KATHLEEN LOUISE FREDERICK Scarsdale, ew York Maria Reginia High School
MATTHEW AUGUSTINE HEARD Chevy Chase, Maryland Gonzaga High School
Baseball, Freshman; Freshman; Phi Kappa Psi
MR. JOHN A. DANDO Football,
CHARLES EDWARD JACOBSON, III Manchester, Connecticut Taft School
IKA
DR. PAUL SMITH
EDWARD BESHARA KARAM, JR. Pittsfield, Massachusetts Pittsfield High School
Acolytes; J esters; Bas ke tb a ll , Freshman and Varsity Manager; Soccer, Freshman Manager; Track, Freshman and Varsity Manager
DR. JAMES L. POTTER
D. BRUCE MAHAFFEY Dallas, Texas Bryan Adams High School
FED; SDS; Junior Advisor; Chapel Committee; Tennis, Varsity; Squa h, Freshman; Saint Anthony Hall
MR. DANIEL B. RISDON
English ROBERT TAYLOR MANN Sewickley, Pennsylvania Sewickley Academy
FEC; Soccer, Freshman and Var ity; Swimming, Var ity; Alpha Chi Rho
BEVERLY DIAMOND MAYR
JOHN WARREN MILLIKEN
ANNE GILBERT POMEROY
We t Hartford, Connecticut Conard High School
Greenwich, Connecticut Saint Mark's School
Poquonock, Connecticut Chaffee School
Hockey, Co-captain; Saint Anthony Hall
IKA; Phi Kappa Psi
PAUL SHATTUCK REG TJER We t .H artford, onnecticut Salisbury chool
Gho t Spirit Society; \ RTC- FM ; Delta Kappa Ep ilon, ecretary and ic -Pr ident
DR. RALPH M. WILLIAMS
English JOHN OGILBY SA DS Gambrill , Mar land verr hool
Phi Mu Delta
MICHAEL EDWI SCAMMO DR. RICHARD P. BENTO
Amesbury, l\la sachusett Hebron cademy
College Affairs Fre hman
ommittee;
occer,
ALBERT MARSTON SMITH Saint Paul, Minnesota Saint Paul Academy
Phi Beta Kappa
MR. STEPHEN MINOT
KENT WALTER TARPLEY
GERALD NEIL VANAKEN
PETER DUNLAP VAN NESS
Crystal Lake, Illinoi Crystal Lake Community High School
Baltimore, Maryland Parkville High School
Lake Forest, Illinois Brooks School
Acolytes; Newman Club; Phi Mu Delta
Football, Freshman
Soccer, Freshman; Alpha Delta Phi
SUZANNE DEFOREST WILSEY Riverside, Connecticut Greenwich Academy
Crucifer ; Christian Fellowship; Trinity Poetry Center; Junior Advisor; Lay Reader; REVIEW, Editor-in-Chief
DR. HUGH S. OGDEN
BONITA FR ti ~t, , ew York ti -;t Cttholi<路
DR
~ICH
EL R. T. .MAHO
RI
路ademy
Y, Chairman
Fine Arts
MELVI r SOUTHWOR II KE. TDlUCK Wendham, ,\fa -- ac ht~ setts Philip c,tdem)
WILLIA~
L
~ \rVI
RI H RDS
w Jer ey Madi n, Trinity-Pawling chool
colyte ; Swimming, Fr hman; Phi Kappa P i, Pr ident
LOUISE BROOK
RI KI:\"
CHARLES EDWARD SHOUSE Colorado prings, Colorado Palmer High School
TRIPOD; Dish Crew; Saint Anthony Hall
MR. MITCHELL N. PAPPAS
JAMES KEVIN WOLCOTT MR. HANS-DIETRICH FROESE
Cranston, Rhod e Island Cranston High School West
Experimental Programs Committee; Basketball, Freshman and Varsity
DR. GEORGE B. COOPER, Chairman
History
JAMES CURTIS AMIS Durant, Oklahoma Durant High School
Acolytes; Monarchist Society; Young Republicans, Vice-president
MATTHEW THOMAS BIRMINGHAM, III
CHRISTOPHER PAUL BLOOMSBURCH
Norwalk, Connecticut The Taft School
Lafayette Hill, Pennsylvania Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School
Hockey; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity Co-Captain; Alpha Delta Phi, President
Glee Club; Theta Xi
II
WILLIAM NICHOLAS BOOTH
DR. ROBERT B. OXNAM
South Lincoln, Massachusetts Brooks School
Chapel Choir; Glee Club; Travelers; Pipes and Drums, President; Saint Anthony Hall; Crew, Freshman and Varsity; Squash, Freshman and Varsity
WILLIAM POMEROY BORCHERT
LAWRENCE LLOYD BRUCKNER
Madison, Connecticut Wooster School
Thomson, Illinois Thomson High School
Connecticut Intercollegiate Student Le~islature; Croquet Society; Speakers Bureau; Corinthian Yacht Club; Young Republicans, Vice-President, President; Crew, Freshman; Pi Gamma Mu, President; Pi Kappa Alpha
Atheneum; Secretary-Treasurer; Band; Chapel Committee; Crown Investment League; Glee Club; Intercollegiate Student Legislature; IVY; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Political Science Club; WRTC-FM; Young Republicans, Chairman; Baseball, Freshman Manager; Football, Freshman Manager
JEFFREY RA WLE CLARK ViJJanova, Pennsylvania Saint Paul's School
Medusa; Crew, Freshman Captain and Varsity; Soccer, Freshman CoCaptain and Varsity Co-Captain; Psi Upsilon
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DR. H. MCKIM STEELE, JR.
DAVID MARTIN COVEY Great eck, New York Hotchkis School
Golf; Phi Kappa Psi
DR. GLENN WEAVER
History CHRISTOPHER DARCY CUR WEN Westwood, Massachusetts Westwood High School
Tennis; Track, Varsity; Sigma Nu
GEORGE KEITH FUNS'!ON, JR. Greenwich, Connecticut Phillips Academy
FEC; Cerberus; Medusa; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Saint Anthony Hall
DR. EDWARD W. SLOAN, III
ROBERT EDWARD GARRETT MR. JAM
Berkele , California Berke le II igh chool
col ytcs; Cru ifers; Je ters, Presid nt; La. Reader
NORDENSCOTT
ILB RT
Winnetka, Illinoi New Trier Hig h cbool
PETERJOH
JE KELU AS
e w Brita in, Connecticut e w Brita in Hi gh chool
Chapel Committee; Chapel Choir; lee Club, Publicity Manag r ; TCC; Junior dvi or; OD Squad; T Planning Committ ; Theta Xi
FE ; lpha
hi Rho
JOH N ALBERT KI G, II Princeto n, N w Jersey Princeton High c hool Athen urn; Theta Xi
SYDNEY KUDER, JR. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania pringfl ld Hig h C'hool
DR. PHILIP
. BA KWITZ
Chapel hoir; Ghost Shirt Society; Glee Club; Concert Choir; Connecticut Intercollegiate Student Legi lature
HOWARD LEWIS, III Van Wert, Ohio Thacher School
Rev italization Corps; Golf; oc er, Fr hman; Track, Freshman; Phi Kappa Pi
DR.
ORTON DOWNS
History Pitt ford, cw York Saint Paul's School
Matri Fund, Co-Chairman; P i Upsilon; Cr w, Fre hman and Var ity, Captain; occer, Freshman
CRAIG FRISCH MAIER Cincinnati, Ohio Cincinnati Country Day School
Young Republicans; Track, Freshman; Theta Xi, Treasurer
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ALA LEWIS MARCHISOTTO Bald win, New York Baldwin HighS hool
Acolytes; Croquet ociety; Crucifer ; IVY, Editor-in-Chi f and Editorial Advisor; Lay Reader; Medu a; TRIPOD, Contributing Editor; Young Republicans, Trea urer; Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu
JOHN CHRISTOPH ~ R MASSEY Chadds Ford, Pennsy l a ni.l Phillip Exeter Academ>
Athen um, Vi e-Prt•sidt•nt; Year Abroad
Junior
PHILIP MICHAEL MCGOOHA West Hartford, Conne ticut Conard High chool
Economic lub; Intramura l Board; Tinidad , Busines Manager; B ~t. eball, Freshman; Football, Fr hman; lpha Delta Phi
BRIAN EDWARD MEYERS
JO ATHAN EDWIN MILLER
Milford, Connecticut Milford High chool
Wilmington, Delaware Friend School
Revi talization
C rberu ; Junior Advisor; Crew, Junior Varsity; Football, Freshman and Varsity Captain; Saint Anthony Hall
orps
ROSEMARY A. MORANTE Plainville, Connecticut Plain ville High School
ROBERT HE RY MULLER ew Canaan, Connecticut ew Can.aan High
DR. E GE E W. DAVIS
Ghost Shirt Society; Young Republicans; Baseball, Freshman; Phi Mu Delta
PETER MARTIN O'BEIRNE, JR. Norwood, Massachusetts Norwood Senior High School
PHILIP MARK OLANDER
WILLIAM JAY OVERTREE
Middletown, Connecticut Woodrow Wilson High School
Cincinnati, Ohio Cincinnati Country Day School
Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu
Junior Advisor; Young Republicans; Theta Xi
Intramural Board; Newman Club; Basketball, Freshman; Theta Xi
History SCOTT NELSON PHILLIPS Manchester, Massachusetts Saint Paul's School
AIESEC; Cerberus; Football, Freshman ; Hockey; Lacrosse, Freshman Captain and Varsity; Saint Anthony Hall
JOSEPH HERSEY PRATT, II
DONALD HENRY PUGH, JR.
JOHN DOUGLAS ROLLINS
Hartford, Connecticut Westminster School
Springfield, Pennsylvania The Haverford School
Shelburne, Vermont New Paltz High School
Soccer, Freshman; Track, Freshman and Varsity; Psi Upsilon
Crew, Junior Varsity and Varsity
Senate; Crew, Freshman and Junior Varsity; Alpha Chi Rho
DAVID MCBRIDE SAMPLE Pawling, New York Trinity- Pawling School
Cerberus; FEC; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Lacrosse, Freshman; Psi llpsilon
THE REV. DR. BORDEN W. PAINTER
DAVID SARASOHN North Bergen, ew Jersey Fie ldston School
Senate; TRIPOD; Saint Anthony Hall; Pi Gamma Mu
FRAZIER GEARY SCOTT
ALAN JOHN SOUTHARD
We tport, Connecticut Staples High School
augatuck, Connecticut Naugatuck High School
Soccer, Freshman ; Theta Xi
Glee Club; Newman Club; Pi Kappa Alpha
JEFFREY CHARLES STURGESS Pine Orchard, Connecticut Tabor Academy
Clio Society; Soccer, Freshman; Squash, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Delta Phi, Treasurer
DR. WALTERJ. KLIMCZAK
Mathematics
MR. ROBERT C. STEWART
LOUIS KOSSUTH BIRINYI, JR. ew London, Connecticut New London High School
MRS. MARJORIE V. E. BUTCHER
Junior Advisor; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity; Sigma Pi Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa
DOUGLAS EVERITTÂŁ CREE E Pawcatuck, Connecticut Stonington High School
Jun ior Advisor; Football, Freshman and Var ity; Lacrosse, Freshman; Alpha Delta Phi
DR. MARIO J. POLIFERNO ANDREW LAWRENCE LIPPS Swampscott, Massachusetts Swamp cott High School
Junior Advisor; Senate; Theta Xi, President; Phi Beta Kappa
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DR. GEORGE A. A DERSO
DR. DON A. MATTSON
Mathematics
MR. DAVID R. JOHNSON, JR.
DR. EMMET F . WHITTLESEY
NANCY ANN HEFFNER Cincinnati, Ohio Wyoming High School
Bradford Junior College Transfer Student; Cerberus; German Club; Psi Upsilon
DR. MICHAEL R. CAMPO, Chairman
Modern Languages DEBORAH DAVENPORT IANNITTO Cincinnati, Ohio The Hillsdale School
PAUL JOHN LALIBERTE
HAROLD GLEASON MORSE
LAURASANDERSSOHVAL
Hol yoke, Massachusetts Holyoke High School
Decatur, Georgia Baylor School
NewYork, New York Riverdale Country School
Junior Year Abroad; Glee Club
Cerberus; Glee Club; Theta Xi
Junior Advisor; Senate
DR. DONALD D. HOOK
Modern Languages DR. ROBERT P. WATERMAN
MR. RONALD
J. QUIRK
MR. LAWRENCE R. STIRES, JR.
DR. ARNOLD L. KERSON DR. GUSTAVE W. ANDRIAN
DR. CARL V. HANSEN
DR. MICHAEL J. PRETINA, JR.
BRUCE ALAN HARMON Auburn, Maine Edward Little High School
Glee Club, Asst. Conductor; Asst. Chapel Organist; Theta Xi
DR. CLARENCE H. BARBER, Chairman
Music NORMA JEAN SCHREIBER New Britain, Connec ticut Northfield School
Chapel Singers; Concert Choir; Trinidads
TIMOTHY DWIGHT WOOLSEY MR. ROBERT E. CRONQUIST 52
Bethesda, Mar{la nd Landon Schoo
Chamber Players, President; Glee Club; Revitalization Corps; Trinidads; Alpha Delta Phi
Senior Recital
53
DR RICHARDT. LEE, Chairman
EDWINBERK DR DREW A. HYLAND
Elkins Park, Pennsylvania Cheltenham High School
New Collegiate Jazz Band; Brass Ensemble; Philosophy Club, Cochairman; Phi Beta Kappa
ALFONSO LINWOOD CARNEY, JR. Norfolk, Virgin ia Washington High School
Acolytes; Philosophy Club; TCB; IKA
DR. WESLEY M. BROWN
Philosophy
KENNETH PARK WINKLER Bellerose, ew York Bronx High School of Science
Philosophy Club, Secretary; REVIEW, Managing Editor; TRIPOD, Editor; Saint Anthony Hall; Swimming, Freshman
DR. BLANCHARD W. MEANS
MR. KARL KURTH JR., Chairman
Physical Education
MR. DAVID R. BURAN
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MR. JACK DANIELS
MR. DONALD G. MILLER
MR. ROBERT E. SCHUL TS
MR. CHESTER H. MCPHEE
MR. ROY A. DATH
MR. FRANK J. MARCHESE
JOSEPH ANTHONY ANGIOLILLO, JR. Hartford, Connecticut Bulkeley High School
Chess Club, Secretary and Treasurer; Sigma Pi Sigma
DR. CHARLES R. MILLER, Acting Chairman
Physics Astronomy CHARLES ZACHARY GREENBAUM Marblehead, Massachusetts Marblehead High School
Band路 Hillel Society; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Fencing; Sigma Pi Sigma Deceased, May 21, 1971.
DR. F. WOODBRIDGE CONSTANT 58
JAMES HENRY MILLER Elgin, Illinois Elgin High School
Junior Advisor; IKA
DR. THOMAS J. SCHMUGGE
DR. ALBERT J. HOWARD
DR. BRADLEY W. PERRY
DR. F. SHIRLEY JONES DR. ROBERT LINDSAY 59
PAUL BASCH West Hartford, Connecticut Conard High School
DR. SAMUEL HENDEL, Chairman
Political Science EDWARD ALFRED BEACOM, IV Wilmington, Delaware Tower Hill School
FEC; Junior Advisor
PETER WHITNEY BENNETT
LEON ALAN BLAIS
SHELDON BEDLOE CROSBY
Cape Elizabeth, Maine Cape Elizabeth High School
Pawtucket, Rhode Island Pawtucket West High School
McLean, Virginia Groton School
WRTC-FM, Program Director 60
TRIPOD; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Hockey; Lacros e, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Delta Phi
STEVEN WESLEY DELANO Bristol, Connecticut Bristol Eastern High School
Cerberus; Crew, Varsity; Theta Xi
FREDERICK KELLOGG GOODHUE Williamsburg, Ma sachuse tts Avon High School
DR. CLYDE D. MCKEE
ROBERT VICTOR HAAS, JR.
ROBERT BRUCE HURST
Canton, Ohio Western Reserve Academy
Omaha, Nebraska Westside High School
Junior Advisor; Senate; TRIPOD; WRTC-FM; Lacrosse, Freshman; Soccer, Freshman and Varsity
TCAC, Chairman; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity
KAREN ANNE LEWCHIK DR. REX C. NEAVERSON
Berlin, Connecticut Berlin High School
DARRYL FRANCIS MADEY Suffield, Connecticut Suffield Academy
DR. ALBERT L. GASTMANN
RICHARD JOHN MAZZUTO East Orange, New Jersey Tabor Academy
Football, Freshman and Varsity; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Delta Phi; IKA, Vice-President
EDWARD WILLIAM OSIPOWICZ, JR. ew Britain, Connecticut New Britain Senior High School
Mather Hall Board of Governors; Political Science Club; Revitalization Corps; Young Republicans; Delta Phi; IKA
JOHN PAUL REALE Holl ywood, Florida Chaminade High chool
Athle tic Advisory Council, Secretary; FEC; N wman Club; Senate; Crew, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Chi Rho, President
GREGORY BARKER SHEPARD Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Westminster School
DR. KUMBALE N.
AYAK
PAUL BURTON SMYTH Manchester, Connecticut Manchester High School
New Collegiate Jazz Band; Intramural Board, Secretary; Baseball, Freshman and Varisty; Soccer, Freshman; Pi Kappa Alpha, VicePresident
DR. JAMES R. COBBLEDICK
Political Science GEORGE KERN STEARNS Cincinnati, Ohio Taft School
Clio Society; Alpha Delta Phi, VicePresident
CLINTON ANDREW VINCE Garden City, New York Garden City High School
Faculty Assistant; Junior Advisor; Political Science Club; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Phi Kappa Psi, ice- President
ROY ALBERT WENTZ, III
JAMESWU
Wilmington, Delaware Friends School
Orange, Connecticut Amity Regional High School
TRIPOD, Sports Editor, Associate Editor; Golf, Freshman and Varsity Co-Captain
Atheneum, Treasurer; Chess Club; Senate; Theta Xi, Vice-president; Pi Gamma Mu, Vice-President
DR. GEORGE W. DOTEN, Chairman
Psychology
LI DA JU E AVSEEV W t Hartford, Connecticut Weaver High chool
Hillel Society; Junior Advisor
GERARD WILLIAM BARTL TT
WIL JAM JOSEPH B LISLE,
Rumson, New j ersey Rumson-Fair Haven Regional High chool
Li bon, Connecticut orwich Free Academy
CITE; Senate; Delta Kappa Ep ilon
Ba eball, Fre hman and Varsity; Football, Fr hman and\ ar ity
III
ROBERT OLIVER CARR Potomac, Maryland Landon School
EDWARD CLIFFORD CUTLER Ambler, Pennsylvania Germantown Academy
FEC; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Lacrosse, Freshman; Sigma Nu
ROY ALAN DUDLEY West Springfield, Massachusetts West Springfield High School
IVY; Mather Hall Board of Governors; TRIPOD; WRTC-FM
JOHN STEWART DURLAND, III Darien, Connecticut Darien High School
Revitalization Corps; Basketball, Freshman; Cross Country, Freshman and Varsity Captain; Track, Freshman and Varsity
DOUGLAS ROBERT EVARTS West Hartford, Connecticut Conard High School
Photography Club; IVY; Alpha Chi Rho
DR. M. CURTIS LANGHORNE
WILLIAM COLLIER FOUREMAN Fort Thomas, Kentuckr Highlan ds H igh Schoo
SUSAN ANN GRACE
PETER JORDAN HARTMAN
Rye, New York Rye Coun ty Day School
W ellesley, Massachusetts Noble and Greenough School
Cerberus; Chapel Choir; Gl ee Club; Psychology Club; Phi Kappa Psi
Mather Hall Board of Governors; TRIPOD; WRTC-FM
ALBERT HUMPHREY
MICHAEL WARD JAMES
LAURA JUNE KAPLAN
Philadelphia, Pennsylva nia Central High School
Bethesda, Maryla nd London School
Woodstock, Connecticu t Woodstock Acade my
Glee Club, Librarian; Junior Advisor; TCB
Junior Advisor; Baseball, Freshman and Varsity; Football, Freshman and Varsity Captain; Phi Kappa Psi
Goucher College Transfer Student; Cerberus; Woman's Advisor y Council; Junior Advisor
DR. EDWARD CALLANAN
DAVID EDWARD KEARNS Manchester, ew Hampshire Manchester High School
Alpha Chi Rho; Tennis
DR. GEORGE C. HIGGINS, JR.
Psychology ALEXANDER WINN KENNEDY Shaker Heights, Ohio Hawken School
FEC; IVY; Psychology Club; TRIPOD; Phi Kappa Psi, Secretary and President; Phi Beta Kappa
SPENCER RICHARD KNAPP ew Canaan, Connecticut Saint Andrew's School
Cerberus; Saint Anthony Hall; Pi Gamma Mu; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Squash, Freshman and Varsity Captain
CHRISTOPHER RIDGWAY KNIGHT Lisbon, Portugal Lawrenceville School
Lacrosse, Freshman; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity Captain; Alpha Chi Rho
LOUIS PETER LAWRENCE Framingham Center, Massachusetts Saint Mark's School
Cerberus; Junior Advisor; Medusa; Hockey Club; Saint Anthony Hall
Psychology DR. KARL F. HABERLANDT
MARK BRYAN MACOMBER
GEORGE GUY MATAVA
PETER MASON MILLER
Albany, New York Albany Academy
Avon, Connecticut Avon High School
Villanova, Pennsylvania Episcopal Academy
Soccer, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Chi Rho
Intramural Board; Junior Advi or; Baseball, Freshman ; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Chi Rho
Intr am ural Board; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Squash, Freshman; Alpha Delta Phi, Corresponding Secretary
MICHAEL WILLIAM REINSEL
GLENN W I LLIAM RYER
ROBERT DAVIS STEIGERWALT, JR.
Wyomissing, Pennsylvania Wyomissing Area High School
Cresskill, New Jersey Cresskill High School
IVY; Track, Freshman and Varsity
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Shad y Side Academy
Cerberus, Vice-President; IVY, Business Manager; Senate; Soccer, Freshman; Psi Upsilon
CARLTON CHASE TAYLOR
JAMES GARRETT WALLEY
JAMES BENSON WEBBER
Worce ter, Massachu etts orth High School
Hastin gs, Nebraska Has tin gs Senior High School
Providence, Rhod e Island Brooks School
Chapel Committee; Glee Club, Manager; Lay Reader; Tennis, Freshman
Acolytes, Director; Chapel Committee; Crucifers; Glee Club; Pi Kappa Alpha
Senate
J. MARVIN WHITE
RANDOLPH BENNETT WINTON
ANTHONY PETER YABLONSKI, JR.
Kansas City, Mis ouri Central Senior High School
Cerberus; Junior Advisor; TCB
eed ham, Massachusetts eedham High School
AIESEC; Lacrosse, Freshman; Theta
ew Britain, Connecticut The Taft School
Chess Club, President; Phi Mu Delta
Xi
MRS. ANN E. ROBINSON
ROBERT BENJAMIN, JR. Jenkintown, Pennsylvania Abington High School
FEC; Senate, Secretary; WRTC-FM ; Crew, Junior Varsity and Varsity; Football, Freshman and Varsity; Alpha Chi Rho, Treasurer
THE REV. DR. EDMOND L. CHERBONNIER, Chairman
Religion DAVID JAMES BROOKS Norwalk, Connecticut Brien McMahon High School
KENNETH LEE BROWNSTEIN New Haven, Connecticut Hillhouse High School
FEC; Trinity High School Seminar Director; Baker Scholar; Junior Advisor; Senate; Fencing; Alpha Chi Rho
CHRISTOPHER LEE EVANS Swampscott, Massachuse tts Swampscott High School
Acolytes; Chapel Committee, Chairman; Chapel Verger; Lay Reader; IKA; Delta Phi, Secretary
JONATHAN WARD GODS ALL King of Pruss ia, Pen nsylvania Upper Merion High School
FEC; Swimming, Freshman and Varsity Co-Captain; Alpha Chi Rho, Vice- President
MR. HERBERT 0. EDWARDS
THE REV. JOHN A. GETTlER, Acting Chairman
THE REV. DR. ALAN C. TULL
THE REV. DR. THEODOR M. MAUCH
CLIFFORD TOLMAGE HAUSER Port Washington, New York Schre iber High School
Glee Club; Corinthian Yacht Club, Commodore; Pipes, Director; WRTCFM; Phi Kappa Psi
THE REV. DR. F. EARLE FOX, JR.
Religion ROBERT SCOTT JENNINGS Darien, Connecticut The Taft School
Squash, Freshman; Phi Kappa Psi
RICHARD ALAN PRICE
JOHN MARTIN REZEK
FRANCES ANN ROHLEN
Roslyn, New York Rosly_n High School
Riverside, Illinois The Latin School of Chicago
Winnetka, Illinois New Trier East High School
Squash, Freshman; Tennis; Alpha Chi Rho
COLLAGE, Editor; Ghost Shirt Society; TCC; Curriculum Committee; Swimming, Freshman; Saint Anthony Hall
Cerberus; Philosophy Club; Tennis, Captain; Phi Kappa Psi
DR. DENNIS HUME WRONG
DR. NORMAN MILLER, Chairman
Sociology
ANTHONY JOSEPH DIBELLA MR. RICHARD K. FENN
Boston, Massachusetts Roxbury Latin School
AIESEC; Band; Glee Club; CITE; WRTC-FM; Lacrosse, Freshman and Varsity; Theta Xi
MR. GEORGE E. NICHOLS, III, Chairman
Theatre Arts
MR. DAVID F. ELIET
75
ANN HOPKINS CARROLL Brooklandville, Maryland Garrison Forest School
MAJOR: Non-Western Studies
MR. ALEXANDER A. MACKIMMIE, JR., Professor of Education
Special Majors F. BRUCE FOXLEY Weston, Connecticut Staples High School
Band; Glee Club; Croquet Society; IVY, Assistant Editor; Pipes; Pi Kappa Alpha, Trea urer, MAJORS: Art History and History
DOMINICK FRANCIS FRANCO West Hartford, Connecticut I-lall High School
MAJORS: French and Comparative Literature
MAJOR RICHARD I. BRUBAKER, Professor of Aerospace Studies
MR. THOMAS H. SKIRM, Lecturer in Education
WILLIAM ROGER FULLER
DAVID GALBRAITH
Gales Ferry, Connecticut Ledyard High School
Northfield, Illinois Loyola Academy
Chess Club; Sigma Pi Sigma, MAJORS: Mathematics and Physics
President of Vassar Junior Class; Clement Lecture Committee; Senate; Fencing; Lacrosse, Varsity; Saint Anthony Hall, MAJOR: American Studies
HOWARD BRUCE GREENBLATT Hartford, Connecti cut Weaver High School
Basketball, Freshman Captain and Varsity Captain; Phi Beta Kappa, MAJORS: English and Religion
A. CHRISTOPHER HALL Barrington, Rhode Island Bulkeley High School
Band, Vice-President; Chess Club, President; Monarchist Society; Jesters, Publicity Manager; Sigma Pi Sigma, Vice-president, MAJORS: Mathematics and Physics
DR. MARTIN G. DECKER, Associate Professor of Education
RUSSELL PHELPS KELLEY,
III West Palm Beach, Florida aint ~l ark' chool
Lacrosse, Fre hman, gli h and Fren h
1 JOR
En-
MR. CLIVE THOMPSO , Modern Dance Artist-in-Residence
Special Majors
Washington, Di trict of Columbia The idw ll Friends chool
Je ters路 TRIPOD; aint nthony Hall; Football, Fre hman; quash , Fre hman; Tenni , MAJOR: rab Studi
J. JA QUES LAGASSE Willimantic, Connecti ut Windh m fli gh chool
Non ich, onnecticut orwich Fr e Academ}'
M JOR : Mathema tic and Phy ics
Goucher Coli ge Tran fi r tud nt; Cerberus; Junior Advisor; Tennis, MAJOR: merican Studies
\ a rwic , Rhode Island Warwi k terans Memorial High chool
Gho t hirt o i ty; Je t r ; La Reader; enate; TRIPOD; v RT FM; Theta Xi, M JOR : P ychology and R ligion
LESLIE GALE PARR
JAY LLOYD SCHAEFER
DAVID WILLIAM SHAPPELL
Tul a, Oklahoma Holland Hall School
Kew Gardens, ew York The Kew Forest School
Manchester, New Hampshire Manchester Memorial High School
Bradford Junior College Tran fer; Pi Gamma Mu, MAJOR: Non-Western Stu die
IVY; Revitalization Corps; TRIPOD; Theta Xi, MAJORS: Economics and English
Lay Reader; Delta Phi Alpha; Crew, Junior Varsity; Swimming, Freshman; IKA, MAJORS: Mathematics and German
JOHN FREDERICK KROLLMANN TYNER
THELMA MARIE WATERMAN
Alexandria, Virginia Williams High School
Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Public High School
Crew, Freshman and Varsity, MAJOR: on-Western Studies
TCAC; Urban and Environmental Studies Advisory Committee, MAJOR: Education/Sociology
MICHAEL EDWARD TRIGG West Hartford, Connecticut Conard High School
Atheneum; Hillel Society; Pr ceptorial Program; Student Speaker ' Bureau; TRIPOD; IVY, Assistant Editor, Associate Editor; TCAC; Revitalization Corps; Phi Beta Kappa, MAJORS: Biology and French
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THOMAS SWARTZ WISWALL Brookhaven, e w York Bellport High School
Orchestra; Philosophy Club; Pi Gamma Mu, MAJORS: Economics and Philosophy
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DR. RICHARD K. MORRIS, Professor of Education
DR. THEODORE D. LOCKWOOD, President
Administration 80
MR. THOMAS A. SMITH, Vice President
MR. EDWIN P. NYE, Dean of the Faculty
81
MR. HARRY 0. BARTLETT, Assistant to the President
Administration
82
MR. W. HOWIE MUIR, Director of Admissions
MR. E. MAX PAULIN, Assistant Director of Admissions
MR. DEL ALAN SHILKRET, Director of Mather Campus Center
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MR. JOHN L. HEYL, Alumni Secretary
MR. RALPH L. MADDRY, Registrar
MR. MARC S. SALISCH, Dean of Community Life
Administration
MR. LEWIS J. GOVERMAN, Assistant Registrar
MR. RALPH D. ARCARI, Chief of Readers' Services
MR. DONALD B. ENGLEY, Librarian
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NR. KNAPP
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MR. PETER J. KNAPP, Reference Librarian
MR. IVAN A. BACKER, Special Assistant for Community Affairs
Administration
MR. HERBERT 0. EDWARDS, Assistant Dean for Human Relations
88
Seasons come and seasons go. Terms begin and end. Chapel, longwalk, and cave remain, but the old Trinity changes through the prism and journey of I. Freshman year: a nest of fears and ambitions. Marks are made as are friends for the love and approval of an isolated ego that needs personal recognition and entrance into higher education. At Trinity, the same older drives flow into new forms and groups are formed and new friendships click on past identity and new loyalties are forged and everyone asks who am I and who are you? Say hello if you wish or tighten your defense and find yourself some boots and walk hard or look for those Around who make you feel who you are or could be. Dreams are fulfilled for some: some shatter others. Many aren't looking, but are pacing a rhythm from library to classroom, vacation, and summer. Vernon street is almost mystique; forbidden but a promised delight. Sophomore year everything picks up supposedly but don't ask why and spring roadies and fraternity rushes sweeten things and one awaits the summer and the .next school year. And the girls are coming. And the girls are coming.
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Sophomore year is the year of the clan. Because a soph is not a frosh, empty, bewildered, lost. A soph knows and nods. More faces are familiar and groups return to em brace the confidence of each other in suite, apartment, and fraternity. The girls have come, but roadies and weekends remain. Transition is painful. Formal arrang~ment and the ego and disguise that buila skillfully for the Saturday-Sunday bust are painfully blue over Monday morning' coffee. She is but a me and a you. She stinks and swears and houses in denim across the hall, all with suitcase, lipstick and flirtatious demure. See her if you might, ask her for an vening if you dare, but she's not yours, nor your problem and if you go with her but once, you need not explain or plan the security of a rendezvous. For you might just smoke with her tomorrow or bump into her at your mailbox in a fit of sorrow at noon. And its fun to have her there. Lost is the facade of hofeless match. She is less of a thing and less of a dream, and less o a game, but more a companion, and more a friend. But sophomore year may find one no nearer to who am I and who are you. The world is large and Trinity small. And the group you are surrounded in may have grown restless or stale. And the many so many other people in other groups whose faces one knows but not knows abound and even threaten. Maxbe you haven't found what you were looking for or what you really want or what really is. Time for a change. Junior year: Bon Voyage! Summer or foreign excursions separate you from group, and customs, and perhaps boredom. Open semester asks: can you really fly? And one hopes so and one learns faith, and a new culture, and the feeling of stranger. And you discover that friendship could mean dependency and trust a giving in or a big hug and a swallowing of the rugged individual, self-sufficient unto himself. You need not be your own separate culture or intellect or play your cool until your image erodes or finds dizzying heights.
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Each I exudes his creative dance and the distance between I and you need not exclude. If a glance forbodes a weakening or anger, fear not. Each day might restore if one forgets before and lets pass and dances even when choking or lost. Groups still form from the structure of casual acquaintance but the barriers do open and the doors can dissolve between you and me and us and them and somebody who's everybody, who's we.
THOMAS M. MILLIGAN, '72
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VARSITY FOOTBALL
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14 ........ R.P.I. .......... .. .. 10 28 ........ Colby ... .... ....... 14 7 ........ Rochester . . . . . . . . . . 24 31 . . ..... . Coast Guard .. . .. . . . 21 36 ...... .. Amherst ............ 19 24 ....... . Wesleyan .. .. . .. .... 14
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CATCH A FALLING STAR & PUT IT IN YOUR POCKET (a polyformal discourse on the dimensions of dissolution and ruled 3-ring-binder paper) here's what happened. first, i left high school for a higher education. sure it was the thing to do & not only for that reason welcome. punctually, no more than a handful of years later, with hardly a .w himper & no shove, came its end (nature goes on; so must the show). oh carol, i am but a fool darling, i love you though you treat me cruel uncertainly but without surprise or celebration, mimeographed letters were stuffed inviting individuals to "submit essays on what (they) feel TRINITY (sic) has meant to them." tired of drawing a blank, this happened, clinging to an interest in history, when i tried. (the operations are by chance; the units were given.) "To sing of Wars, of Captains, and of Kings, Of Cities founded, Common-wealths begun, For my mean pen are too superior things: Or how they all or each their dates have run, Let Poets and Historians set these forth, My obscure Lines shall not dim their worth." -Anne Bradstreet, "Prologue"
no thread of n1agic fe II near your ear? there's nothing you can put your finger on'? just a little unsure? you can join the crowd. last \Vords are no \vill and seldorn amount to a testament. einstein's last \vorcls \vere spoken in german, a language his nurse, the only listener, never learned. no parable is your explanation of four vears at .trinitv. , . suppose trinity \vere a sumn1er camp. they hire counsellors, figure out son1e activities and a\vards, send out catalogues, and call a trinity. \vhat happens if no one goes? it would still be summer. "You \Vere praised, my books, because I had just come from the country; I \vas t\venty years behind the times so you found an audience ready. I do not diso\vn you, do not diso\vn your progeny. l-Iere they stand \vithout quaint devices, 1-Iere they are \vith nothing archaic about them. Observe the irritation in general: 'Is this,' they say, 'the nonsense that \ve expect of poets' " -Ezra Pound, "Salutation the Second"
precisely what is it that we would preserve? there was the sit-in, community. we were the bearers of such things to this school. but today most find the new curriculum self-explained, take coeducation to be everyday, think the new adjudicative system mundane and consider the demise of the medusa and the senate an ancient happening. they are correct; these were meager, actions of a class for itself but not in itself. it is already too late for us. nowhere a genie. and it wasn't an eternity. it does little good to suggest we've done the best we could. at least it all clarified the significance of work. i keep trying to tell myself it's some other thing. but i know it's not a question of blame. now none of us can forget trinity. bounded by a cemetery and the cliff face called "the rock," we secured a clean well-lit place. there was no space for falling. the top 40 of colleges is very crowded. it's possible not to know. this is one of those painful times when description of the form exhausts the situation. 0
you come to a garden, agree on names, and are told to go. nothing spectacular. its happened since the beginning of time. there never was any cal! for complaint, least of all now. we fought for the american ball and now we 1eave the playing fields. "if dogs run free then why not we across the sweeping plain
... the best is always yet to come that's what they splained to me" -bob dylan, new morning
the long walk is over. it doesn't prove a thing. sometimes, it doesn't even leave you wondering. "If I could turn you on, if I could drive you out of your \Vrctched mind, if I could tell you I would let you know." -R.D. Laing, The Politics of Experience "the statement is pointless. the finger is speechless." -R.D. Laing, Knots i try to reflect on trinity, fairly naturally, but not without some . 路difficulty. there was the early morning; there were some lessons. i wonder what you're supposed to take away. without either love or laughter we'll be handed diplomas & a chance to move from black to grey. it seems there should be something special in this. no more? school? a parochial message to someone we can't console? college was such costly tinhorn trickery. why pretend? like vietnam, it's no easier to admit the life lost was in vain. the hope is in our hands. and something happens called a ceremony. it's no big thing, just a fact, like the moon. their processional can only mean now, finally, go your own way. the hope is more than in reach. now our apologies are even less forgiveable than this volume. our arms know now the feel of the columnsand we're not even blind. "So deep a sound fell down it grew to be A long soothsaying silence down and down. The crickets beat their tambours in the wind, Marching a motionless march, custodians." 0
-Wallace Stevens, "The Comedian as the Letter C, V, A Nice Shady Home"
You get a sheepskin. steven h. keeney, '71
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Formerly, college was classics and divinity, Pompous traditions embracing irrelevancy. Minds w re embalmed in that ivory tower, Ignoring their duty to each crisis of each hour. ow, a a lilac in full bloom, We sway to meet each spring-time breez That, leaving us, carries our fragrance like a balm To heal the world's ever-growing, ever-pres ing n ds. II
The heavy sirocco presses me forward, o hward, northward, closer to God's End for me. Why am I torn, why do I tremble, Why is my soul chained to each gust of thi driving wind? I long for the peace of a secluded tower Serving the world's will with a free soul's power. III an needs his shelters from which to grow, Such freedom of life brings the will to know. o hidden secret veils this unity: Minds that are chained serve souls that are free. William R.
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uller, '71
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Greenblatt-1000 pts. during College caree1路
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78 .. . ....... St. Lawrence .... . ..... 123 64 .......... Coast Guard . . . . . . . . . . 73 81. .. . ... .. . M.I.T ... .... . . ... .... . 65 99 ... ... .. . . Brandeis .. ... ...... .. 109 95 .......... Amherst . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 76 .......... N.Y.A.C. ...... .... ... 109 59 ..... . .... Kings Point . . . . . . . . . . . 69 81 .......... Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 74 . . ...... .. Middlebury . . . . . . . . . . . 72 79 . . ..... .. . Union . .... ..... ...... 94 100 .... . ... . . M.C.C. ..... . . . ....... 55 93 .......... Rochester . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 77 . .... .. ... Wesleyan . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 78 .... .... .. Hobart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 94 ....... . .. Coast Guard . . . . . . . . . . 61 73 .......... W.P.I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 73 ..... .. .. . Bowdoin . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 74 ..... . .... Colby ................ 111 75 . .. . ...... Wesleyan . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 100 . . . ...... . Tufts ............... . . 80 93 .......... Univ. ofHtfd. . . . . . . . . . 94
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43 ......... R.P.I. ..... . ... ... ....... 70 36 . ...... .. Amherst .. . . . ...... . . .... 66 69 ...... . .. North Eastern .... . ... . ... 42 69 ..... . ... Babson ...... . ... . ... . . . . 44 15 . ...... .. Springfield .... ... ........ 94 34 ..... .... M.I. T .................... 77 41 ....... .. Coast Guard . . .. .. ....... 72 31 . .... .. . . Bowdoin ........... . .. . . 81 70 ... . .. .. . Holy Cross .. . ... ....... .. 41 51 .... . .. .. W.P.I. ......... . .. . ..... 62 47 .. ....... Tufts ....... ... ... . .... . . 66 60 ..... . ... Union . ... ........... . ... 52 26 .. ..... . . Wesleyan .... ...... . .. . . . 80
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john Rezek
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Denise Levertov
Jimmy Breslin
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VARSITY SQUASH
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0 ...... .... .. Navy .. .... .. . ... ........... 9 Snow .. . . ... . Army .... ...... .... . . ... Snow 2 ............ Frank. & Marsh. . ..... ....... 7 1 .. ....... . . . Yale ........ . . ........ .. ... 8 9 .. . ......... Adelphi .... ... .... . .. . . .... 0 2 . . . ... . ..... Amherst ............ .. .. ... . 7 9 .. .... ...... Hobart . .... ..... .. . .. .. .. . . 0 8 ............ Bowdoin ... .... ... .. ....... 1 0 ............ Williams ....... . ........... 9
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5 ....... .. ... Wesleyan . .. .. .............. 4 9 .. .. .. ... ... Brown ..... ...... .......... 0 3 ... ..... . . .. Amherst .. .. .... .. .. .. ... . .. 6 6 .......... . . Stony Brook . ..... . ....... . .. 3 7 ... .. . .... .. M.I.T....................... 2 5 ..... . ...... Wesleyan ................... 4 7 ............ Rochester ........... . ....... 2 8 . ....... .... M.I.T... ........ ... ... .. .. .. 1
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HOCKEY (Informal) T 0 2 .......... U. Conn ............... 8 3 . . .. . .. . . . M.I.T .......... ... ...... 2 3 ..... . .... Nichols .. . ....... . . . .... 4 1 .......... Amherst ........ .. ..... . 9 1 .......... Lowell Tech ...... .. .... 6 2 ... . ...... Babson ....... .. ....... . 3 7 .......... New Haven . ....... . . ... 2 4 . . . . . . . ... Yale JV' s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2 .......... Wesleyan ......... ... ... 5 2 ... . .. . ... Holy Cross .... . .. . ...... 6 4 ..... .. .. . New Haven .. . ... ... . ... 2 0 . . . . . . . . .. Yale JV' s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 6 ...... .. .. Wesleyan ......... . ..... 2
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Blood Drive
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9 ...... . ...... Brooklyn . . . . . . . . . . 18 15 ..... . ..... .. Fordham . . . . . . . . . . 12 9 .. . ......... . Yale . ... .... .. . ... 18 9 . . ..... . ..... Harvard ... . ... .. . . 17 12 .... . ... . ... . Brandeis . . . . . . . . . . 15 6 . .. . .. . . .. ... M.I.T ........ .. .... 21 14 .. . ....... .. . Holy Cross ......... 13 9 . .... . .. ... . . W.P.I. . ......... .. 18 Third in New England's
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TENNIS
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1 ............ Amherst ................ 8 1 ............ Williams .. .. .... .. . .... 8 1 ............ Yale ................... 8 7 ............ U. Conn ................ 2
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VARSITY LACROSSE T 0 8 ... .. .. .. .... . Bowdoin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 5 .......... .. .. Union ................... 6 17 . .. . .... ... ... Holy Cross .... . ... . . . .. . . 5 5 .... ... . . ... . . Amherst .. . .. .. .. ... . . . .. 7 14 ... ... . . ..... . Tufts . .. ... .... . . . ... . .. . 3 19 .. . ... . ..... . . U.R.I. .. ... .... . .... . ... . 3 13 . . .. . ... ... ... M.I.T . .. .... .. . . . .... .. .. 9 8 . .... .. ....... Nichols ... ... .... . .... . .. 6 5 .............. Wesleyan .. . . . .......... 10
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Student Art Show
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75 0000000000Amherst 0000000000000 75 910 000000000Middlebury 0000000000 63 69 0000000000Union 000000000000000 75 70 0000000000RoPolo 000000000000000 84 93 0000000000Williams 000000000000 61 72 0000000000Wesleyan 000000000000 82 44 0000000000Coast Guard 000000000 110 53 0000000000WoPol. 00000000000000 92 Easterns at Brandeis 0 0 0 09th out of 19
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VARSITY BASEBALL T
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7 ......... Colby .... . ................. 12
1 . . . . . . . . . Boston College . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
0 ..... . ... Colby .. . ................... 1
3 . ....... . A.I.C . .... . ........ .. . .... . . 4
7 .. . . . . . . . Amherst . . ................ . . 19
2 ....... . . Tufts . .. . . .. .............. .. 3
2 ...... . . . U. Conn. . .................. 10
11 ......... Wesleyan . . .... . ..... .. .... . 4
8 ...... .. . Coast Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1 . . . . . . . . . Springfield . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
6 ......... Coast Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
14 ....... . . Wesleyan ..... . .... ... ...... 5
10 ......... Williams ................. . . 5
2 ... . . ... . M.I.T . ... . ............ . ..... 9
4 ......... Bowdoin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
201
Doo-Da
202
Jean- Louis Barrault
203
Spring Clean-Up
20-4
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Sha-Na-Na
The Pipes
Ute Saine's approach to literatur taught m several things the most important of which is that I should be forever mindful of any literature studies which t ke me away from society and reality and plunge me into a I isure approach to reading to the ext nt that that lit rature for goes any possibility of causing an engagem nt betw en reality and the reader. My studies her at Trinity have though taken me away, directly, from society and reality, but they have brought me closer to an understanding of myself and my position in the world about me. Perhaps the purpos of an education in such a cloistered world as found here at Trinity is to do just that,-to take us away from the world and put us on the Isle of St. Pierre where lik Rouss au's solitary walker we dream, study, and reflect upon the world, upon man, and upon ourselves. Yet the paradox of the relevant education is too often reflective of the unique way an educatioR can have absolutely nothing to do with the way men die, the way and the why men war, and th way on can carve out a niche in the world to the bett rment of mankind.
21-ol
Even at night at Trinity we all remain visible to the others around us so that we are protected against attacks by others. The hour approaches 8 and 9, then 10-the same hours experi nc d upon waking, but then I know I don't have to hurry to a class to sit in a classroom with a bunch of students who upon hearing the very mentioning of the word test are off to the library to hibernate in order to vomit forth a perfect score of memorization. The night becomes the time to sit and reflect, to study, to hear the noises of passing students, to sm ll th r freshing aromatic scents of pot and incense. The night always brings back memories of freshman preceptorial meetings that extended into the wee hours of the mornings, yet brought many minutes of sensitive awareness to others, to myself, to the ticking of the second hand on my watch as one minute led into another.
215
While studying French existentialism my s nior year, a member of my class described Beckett's writings as futil attempts to piece together a jigsaw puzzl that B ck tt knew would never fit together but he had to ke p on trying- and the interesting thing was that in each of his works the puzzle pieces always remained the same. So my ducation here at Trinity became, but n ver finished becoming, a futil s arch for answers-answers to questions that resulted from th shake-up over the past few years. The who, the why, and the where questions are no longer important for th y have and will continue to remain the same from on g n ration to the next. What counts now are the what questions and th how questions, for each of us must come to realize our respective limitations so that we can do with our live a w fit. In this way, the lecture hall gave way to the s minar and th objective examination went out under the pressur of students who demand d the paper, the essay or the thesis as a means of expressing what th y truly kn w. As I sit and write these thoughts on paper not knowing how one paragraph can tie in with another, I refl ct back on those highlights of my four years now conclud d at Trinity and try and imagine what I would hav don differently if my four years were to recommence. I suppos at this point my most significant failing is studying for the most part with the vast majority of the pre-medical students who through their aims, strivings, and aspirations stifl any and all learning processes simply to get another A or A- on their transcript. L;,homme sensible has to let the book drop som time to reflect on what h is, and how that which he i absorbing relates to his life, and how, if at all, what he is absorbing will be transmitted to the rest of his xist nee.
216
Four years have now gone-in one lump sum. Change came to reside 'neath the elms just as it did in the society surrounding the campus. The status quo of the former Trinity community may have been disturbed, but still inherent in the Trinity education was and still is the principle that a student has the responsibility to make of his education what he wants it to be. He is his own creator; thus the opportunity is still there for the student to become sensitive and feeling to his world and to the world about him. I don't think there is any more we can ask of an institution than to provide an atmosphere where one can grow emotionally and intellectually.
MICHAEL E. TRIGG, '71
217
GRADUATION May30, 1971
218
220
221
222
223
The life and death of John Butler has had a tremendous impact upon the entire Trinity community. As the Director of Placement, Mr. Butler dedicated his life to guiding young men to a productive commitment in their adult careers, even when beset by serious illne s. Those older alumni who knew Mr. Butler, along with the parents of students and all hi friends, will remember him with their own unique and cherished memories ofhis friendship. Younger alumni who encountered him a undergraduates will recall with affection th tirele s efforts he expended to counsel them in their choice of careers. Members of the Faculty or Administration will remember him as a devoted colleague who erved Trinity under the administration of three Presidents. According to all who came in contact with John Butler, his whole life was one of service to hi fellow men. Trinity has lost a man of quality and distinction-one who be remembered and missed.
In Memoriam ]OH
F. B TLER
Charle Zachar Greenbaum entered Trinity ollege in the Fall of 1967. Although h wa trick n in the Spring of 1970 with the ailment which was to oon take his life he refu d to be disheartened. With an in piring display of faith, courage and determination he continued the work of his academic program at the campu up to v ithin a fev week of his death at the age of 22 on May 21, 1971. Hi Bachelor of Science Degree with Major in Physics wa awarded posthumou ly at the omm ncement xerci es on May 30, 1971. Charles wiU be remember d by his teach rs as a talented and dedicated science tudent with a mo t promising professional career 1 ing before him. He will be remembered by all his many friend at the College a a warm, friendly young man, who was ever cheerful and ready to help tho e in need. In the face of life's greatest te t he demm trated that the human spirit i far tronger than any physical adversity. We shall forever mourn hi los . Robert ind a Profe sor of Physic
CHARLESZ.GREENBAUM
KEG BEER-WINESLIQUORS Brood Street across from the Bond Bakery
Men and Women's Fine Clothing Since 1909
JEFFERSON ST. I.Trinity I THRIFT SHOP Fine Second Hand Clothing Clean & Nearly New
~tnrkpnlr, ~nnrr,
路Broad St.
t!Trynu
115 Asylum Street, Hartford, Conn. Phone 522 0181-0pen Thurs, 'til 9
Washington St.
One of America 's Fine Stores
"Where you con shop in on unhurried atmosphere" ..,; U)
搂 Open:
OVER THE ROCKS
5
>
M-F 9:45-3:45
Sat 9:45-12:45
MARION'S LUNCHEONETTE
Hudson
--~>
343 ZION ST. FINE FOODS
Telephone 524-2144
~
m
Compliments Of Your .
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘
ON THE CORNER OF BROAD AND VERNON STREETS
lireaBroin
-++ HORSFORD'S +ACID+
PHOSPHATE+--
Prepared according to the directions of Prof. E. N. Horsford.
Across From Trinity College 2137 New Britain Avenue Hartford, Conn.
This preparation is a brain food. It increases the capacity for mental labor, and acts as a general tonic and vitalizer. It rests the tired brain, and imparts thereto new life and energy. Dr. D.P. McClure, Rantoul, III., says: "Very beneficial to strengthen the intellect." Dr. O.C. Stout, Syracuse, N.Y., says: "I gave it to one patient who was unable to transact the most ordinary business, because his brain was 'tired and confused' upon the least mental exertion. Immediate benefit and ultimate recovery followed." Dr. Chas. T. Mitchell, Canandaigua, N.Y., says: "I recommend it as a restorative in all cases where the nervous system has been reduced below the norma l standard by overwork, as found in brain workers, professional men, teachers, students, etc." Dr. F.W. Lytle, Lebanon, III., says: "I have personally used it with marked advantage when overworked, and the nervous system much depressed." Dr. E. Robinson, Cleveland, 0., says: "Can cordially recommend it as a brain and nerve tonic." Descriptive pamphlet free on application to BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES AND IMITATIONS. CAUTION:-Be sure the word "Horsford" is printed on the label. All others are spurious. Never sold in bulk.
Phone 247-0234
Rumford Chemical Works, Providence, R.I.
DELICIOUS PIZZAS AND HOT OVEN GRINDERS
ABC PIZZA HOUSE
IMMEDIATE FREE DELIVERY
In Hartford
ONE OF HARTFORD'S LARGEST PACKAGE STORES Featuring DRIVE-IN PARKING FREE GIFT WRAPPING UNUSUALLY LARGE SELECTION OF IMfORTED & DOMESTIC WINES & CORDIALS 650 CASES OF BEER ON ICE PARTY PLANNING SERVICE 10 EXPERIENCED CLERKS DISCOUNTS ON CASE LOTS LOCATED NEAR TRINITY COLLEGE
** * * **
ONE OF HARTFORD' S LARGEST SUPPLIERS OF KEG BEER Free Coolers & Pumps
*
*
YOU are important at
United Bank
OUR SLOGAN - If We Don't Stock It - They Don't Make It
THE HARVEY& LEWIS CO. GUILD OPTICIANS 45 Asylum
Joseph Castro Phone 246-0055
85 Jefferson St. Hartford
Motor Tune-Ups-Brake Service 1279 BROAD STREET
Bishop's Corner West Hartford
PHONE, HARTFORD
C & N AUTO SERVICE
HARTFORD, CONN.
CORNER ALLEN AND BROAD
1528-742 t TElEPHONE 2364833 (Area code 203)
24
HOUR HOTEL. SERVICE
CONSTRUCTION CO.
AIR-CONDITIONED TUB BATHS
e
TEL.EPHONEII IN ROOMS
HARTI"ORD CITY l.IMITa ROUTI:e
U . S . 15 a CONN . US
WaTHa .. a~taLD
GENERAL CONTRACTORS 244 PROSPECT AVENUE
HARTFORD, CONN. 06106
CONNaCTICUT
WIL.•u .. C ..oea H I OHWAY
THE LINCOLN DAIRY
co. BETIER MILK, CREAM and ICE CREAM
Visit Your Neighborhood LINCOLN DAIRY ICE CREAM BARS
NATIONAL TYPEWRITER CO., INC. OLYMPIA TYPEWRITER DEALER Sales-Rentals- Repairs On All Makes of Typewriters, Duplicators, Adding Machines and Checkwriters Duplicators and Office Supplies Special Renta l Rates to Students
MAIN OFFICE & PLANT 1030 NEW BRITAIN AVENUE WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
Phone 527-1 115 247 ASYLUM STREET
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
PARTITIONS Inc. 77 GRASSMERE AVENUE
WEST HARTFORD, CONN. 06110
JOHN
PHONE 236-0821
KONOPKA
TREASURER
LARGEST PRODUCT 19 FLAKE IN CAPTIVITY ll
1
?/8 inches
by 1 1/4 inches
DISCOVmED APRIL 25, 19?1 IN MATHFB HALL. TRI ITY CQU.FliE
(Eaten that same day by jealous finder) DIS T RIBUTORS FOR
NEW YORK MEAT PRODUCTS, INC. PUR V EYORS T O H O TELS , REST A UR A NTS , I NSTITUT IO NS
CHO I CE GRADE BEEF - VEAL - LAMB - PORK UNIFORM PORTION M EATS PRECOOKE D Q UALIT Y FOODS
48 ED WARDS ST .
CON V EN I ENCE FOO D S
HAF" T FORD , CONN .
R E P . BY .
TE L . 522 -8281
229
Compliments of
KENT CLEANERS
THE CAMPFIELD HARDWARE CO. Servicing
AD
15 WEBSTER ST. Psi U
HARTFORD, CONN.
PHONE 525-3338
Delta Psi
Crow Pike
Gabriele Gigliello Shoe Service Quality Work Done While
LANDERMAN AGENCY . . . ORCHESTRAS AND ENTERTAINMENT . . . 179 Allyn Street
You Wait 230
Special Work For Trinity 418 New Britain Avenue
Hartford, Connecticut
Telephone 249-8596
HUNTINGTON'S BOOI< STORES
Marble Pillar
Books of All Publishers
Known For German-American Food
IN HARTFORD
110 Asylum Street
Lowenbrau-On-Tap
IN WEST HARTFORD
22 Central Row
968 Farmington Avenue
The bank with your future in mind.
CONNECTICUT CO. Connecticut owned-Connecticut operated MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED CHARTER BUSES ANYWHERE IN U.S., CANADA, OR MEXICO
Call us about our many planned one, three, four and five day tours.
SERVING CONNECTICUT FOR OVER 70 YEARS Member F.D.I.C. Offices throughout Greater Hartford
STANDARD BUILDERS INC.
Hartford, Conn.
53 Vernon St. Telephone:
246-1666
• MOTOR
HOTEL•
55 AIRPORT ROAD HARTFORD CONNECTICUT 08114 lflEPHONE 278 -o740
PltONK: 12031 828-8228
BERLIN TURNPIKE lltT •. U.•• S a C:ONN. 1•1 WETHERSfi"IELD, CONN.
231
October 1 t
ovember 1st OF FRESHMAN YEAR
102 ASYLUM STREET
HARTFORD 3, CONN.
TEL. 525-0897-8
m. :J,.ant JligginJ
DILLON MAILING BUREAU
& Co., !Jnc. FLOORING CONTRACTORS
Complete Letter Shop Service 164 BUCKINGHAM STREET
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT 250 PEARL STREET HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT Tel. 249-6826
232
Telephone 527-5121
SMOKE RICHMOND STRAIGHT CLOSE TO RED COACH AND HOWARD JOHNSON RESTAURANTS
FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE HARTFORD 529-8691
CUT. 1 'h MILES SOUTH OF HARTFORD- ROUTE 5-15 WILBUR CROSS PARKWAY, WETHERSFIELD, CONN. 06109 ALTERNATE ROUTE 1-91
RADIANT HEAT- TELEVISION TELEPHONES
FIREPROOF- MODERN DECOR AIR CONDITIONED
OTIO EPSTEIN, INC.
Sanitary Engineers and Contractors
FORTY ELM STREET HARTFORD CONNECTICUT
Compliments\Of
The College F:ood Se 路ce
We extend an invitation to the entire student body to view the most extensive collection of gentlemen' s clothing and accessories ever offered.
r
Trinity's Closest Complete Clothing Store
TRINITY
Open Monday Through Saturday Importer
DRUG CO. Alec. Goldin Ph. G.
Registered Pharmacist Clothier
Furnisher
Hartford, Conn.
1284 Broad St.
24 Trumbell Street • Hartford • 525-2139
America's only newspaper in its third century Daily • Su11day
I
'I
WHITING GREENHOUSES INC.
NEIDITZ BROS. CONTRACT FURNITURE
Established 1852 67 Whiting Lane
West Hartford, Conn. telephone 523-4235
06119
for Schools, Institutions 500 FARMINGTON AVE. HARTFORD
Member of the Florist Trans-World Delivery Assc.
CHARCOAL BROILED
Jlte~€oach ~~~ . c§ritt
rendezvous at
STEAKS SEA-FRESH MAINE LOBSTERS
COCKTAILS IN THE TALLY-HO LOUNGE
WETHERSFIELD • Route 15 Tel.: 529-7497
19si J!psilon
Congratulations from
255 Franklin Avenue 1 Mi. So. of Htfd. Hosp.
Foreign and avant garde Films
Compliments of
The Wadhams & May Company Builders
THE CONSTITUTION NATIONAL BANK 200 TRUMBULL STREET, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT The Person to Person Bank FULL BANKING SERVICE
State Tile & Marble Co., Inc.
TELEPHONE 289-9131
49 Glassmere Ave.
Branches:
West Hartford
232-3030
ceremic, tile, marble, slate installations
440 New Park Ave., West Hartford 150 Silas Deane Highway, Wethersfield 260 Hartford Ave, Newington MEMBER: F.D.I. C.
236
SAVITT P.O.M.G. Diamond Merch ants Optician Jewelers 35 A ylum Street "35 econd From Main treet" Downtown Hartford Connecticut
PREJ DICE I THI nd will rob you of many good things.
Our cigarette are as fin e a 路 can be produced. They h(l e lately been impro ed, are not hard nor dry-Will always smok free and moist-Will not crumble in the pocket 11or "catch you in the throat." If you a-r not opposed to a change aml cannot obtain th em of your dealel', send to the manufacturers for a ample.
WM. S. KIMBALL & CO., Enclo e thr e Red tamps.
Rochester,
TRACY, ROBINSON & WILLIAMS CO. INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES
.Y.
110 A IRPORT ROAD
HARTFORD 14, CONNECTICUT
Phone 522-721 1
"Primus Dogus Quadus"
THE TRINITY COLLEGE BOOKSTORE ongratulates The Cia s of 1971 and Welcomes The Class of 1975 The Hargrove
Trinity EXPE1 SE After Commencement 1884, the amount of the Treasu_rer' bills each year will be a follows:Tuition (Christma Term, 40; Trinity Term, $60), .. . ......... $JOO.OO Room-rent for eac h person, 100.00, $75.00, $60.00, $50.00, $30.00, or (wi th scholar hip), ... 25 .00 InciderHals, ... . ... . . ............... . ..................... 30.00 Heat, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.50 Total, $242.50, $217.50, $202.50, S 192.50, S 172.50, or ..... . . S 167.50 The cost of boa.r d for 36 weeks at $4.50 or $5.00 per week i $ 162.00 or 180.00. To thi must be added laundry charge , tog ther with the expense of books, furniture, clothing travel, and ociety fees, whi ch vary ac cording to the taste and habits of the studen t, and of which no es timate can b given.
ROOM A D 8 l 01 C ~he new build~gs were commenced in 1875. They are thoroughly dram d, well vent1lated and unsurpa -ed for convenience and comfort. In 1881 the o_rtham gat way was begun, and the we tern ide of th.e great quadrang]e 1 now complet d . E<l y acces from the city i ecured by m an 路 of str et-car running to th olleg ground . An excellen t athletic ground i provid_ed for ball playing and other out door spor t ; ther are also several temus courts, and a gymna ium. The rooms are a rranged so a 路 to provide for two tud nt rooming tog th er~ a ommon 路tudy and _separate ~ed -room . They are h at d by steam, ana lighted by ga , and venti latiOn 1 ecurc? by open ~re plac s. Water i 路 carried to every floor. By mean of spe 1al scholar h1ps the harges for room -rent are brought within the reach of all the stude nt . The site of the buildings i remarkable for its hea lthfulne .
\
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•\
\
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·.
\ ;·
\
\
hen you want a fine portrait ... to record forever with charm and dignity the important events of your life,come to the Photograph Studio of your Official Photographer ...
f T EVEft 8£ F I LL( D CAN
ZIP'S
trJ. I
I
~ T he
ollege View Tavern
just ov r the rock
Young qe~tlB!IJen ~hould ~emembe~ T hat quite a l:lrg.:
~ aving
··.u1 1».: madl· h· pu rc has ing- lhcir
GLOVES, UNDERCLOTHING, NECKWEAR, HOSIERY, & ., -
( ) fl'
BE E HIvE'
Th.:
Carps s, Rugs, Mats, Curtains,Portieres, A !l d those things per taining to the d~:coration of roo m ~ . will fi nd it for their interest to pa lro n i ;~ e
IF~
BE
~
St\Hknts
HIV
:S:..A:ETFOBD2-40
NEWS PRESS PRINTE.R OF THE TRINITY REPORTER
20 ISHAM ROAD • WEST HARTFORD
HART F0 RD,
Where a good line of th~· ahovc ~ oods i always kept in s toc k. B EE H JVP. also deals lar~cly in
'L
THE PRINTED WORD IS
_ \. · · -
FIRST-CLASS DRY GOODS HOUSE. sUCH IS THE
WHAT'S THE WORD?
'
l"'iiiiiii~~==;;;-:=::;r;:--:----:==--:--=:-
GOVERNMENT SURPLUS SALES
ROZ'S RECORD SHOP
364 Asy Jurn t. opp. Hi lton Garage
19 A ylum t.-246-7692 1131 Albany Ave.-525-9895 138 Barbour St.-525-5536
247-77 7 military clothing, fiel.d jacket , blue officer coats, pea coats, camping equipm nt, ombat boots, flares, bell bottom , lacks blu j ans, land-lubbers, eafarer , Madew 11, leather jackets
Hoz' Mobile nit Serving the Greater Hartford Area
JACOB'S PAINT STORE DUTCH BOY PAINTS 134 Park Road
INTERLUX MARINE PAINTS West Hartford, Connecticut
Telephone: 236-2501
ACE HARDWARE COMPANY 394 NEW BRITAIN AVENUE Telephone 247-7904 Special Discounts to Trinity Students
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT Prompt Delivery Service Complete Tool Rental Service
2A1
This book is published through the courtesy of the advertisers. In order to let them know their investments have been appreciated, kindly mention the 'IVY when patronizing.
AMEN
Index SENIOR SECTION ADMI ISTRATIO ESSAYS T. Milligan S. Keeney W. Fuller M. Trigg
88 130 144 216
SPORTS Football Soccer Cross Country Basketball Swimming
71 122 134 146 156
Squash Hockey Fencing Tennis
Baseball
186 194 198
Crew
206
Lacrosse Track
GRADUATION ADVERTISEME
Senior Directory Ad air, M. J. Adams, P. W. A~erton, D. J. A drich, M. Alford, V. C. Ami ]. C. Andrick , L. C. Angiolillo, ) . A. Apr il!, . M. Avseev, L. J. Ayres, J. B. Bacon, R H. Badge r, M. . Baker, C. H. Barbour, j . R. Bar tow, B. C. Barth, M. C. Bartl ett, G. W. Bach, P. Beacom, E. A. B eed~, C. A. Belis e, W. ]. Benjamin, R. Benn ett, P. W. Bcrk, E. Be ch, C. A. Birinyi, L. K. Birmingham, M. T. Blais, L.A. B!oomsburgh, C. P. Booth, W. . Borchert, W. P. Bowe E. A. Bradford, W. E. Brigis, T. H. Broo 路s, D. J. Brownstein, K. L. Bruckner, L. L. Brun , D. W. Burton, R. P. Carlson, E. C. C arney, A. L. Carr, R. 0 . Carroll, A. H. asey, D. S. Castagno, A.]. Castronovo, B. J. lement, M. H. Colma n, B. E. Comeau, M. ) . Coriale, B. F. ovey, D. M. Cro bv, S. B. C rusO;l, P. ]. Cullen, P. C . Cu nnin gha m, B. L. Curwen. C. D. Cutler, E. Da hl, C. K. D avidson, R. F. D avis, L. Delano, S. W. De rrick, B. M. Devine, P. W. Dibble, C . R. DiBella, A. J. DiBenede tto, T. R. D ickl er, H. C. D ight, T. E. Dr ury, D. Dudley, R. A. Durla nd, }. . Endersby, D. L. Evan , . L. Evar ts, D . R.
P路ychology
12
Engin eriug Economic E1 gli h
38
English 58
12 64 l2
Economics
30 30 P ychology Religion Biology
64 60 60 30 64 70 6()
54 Biology
47 38 60 38 39 39 1.3
Psychology
29 70
70 39
Spanish En~li sh
Psycho ogy
55
65
76
American Studies
13
Spanish
30 30
Political cien e
36 40 60 29 Economic English
40 65 24 3J 24 61 13 31 13
73 24 Englis h Hi"tory Engineering
65 65
Art History
70 65
Ewbank, ]. B. Farrenkot, L. C. Fawb r, . B. Fentress, D. Filer, C. N. Follansbe H. Fora ti ere, A. A. Fo t r, B. Foulkrod, J. F. Foureman, \V. Foxley, F. B. Franco, D. F. Frederick, K. Freudenthal, S. F. Friedman, D. C. Fuller. W. R. Fu ns ton. C. K. Galbraith, D. Ganley, D. j . Garrett, R E. Carri 路on, M. B. Ce i e r, M. T. ilbert, . s. Cilfoyl , T. Gillette, M. T. Codsall, J. W. Goodhue, F. K. Cra e, . A. Graham, K. C. Granville, W. C. Craves, ]. H. Gr en, D. W. Green, . F. Greenbaum, C. z. Greenbla tt, H. B. Greene, D. E. Griffith, P. T. Griggs, J. E. Haas, R. Hai.n~ . C. Haji路 med , A. M. Hall A. C. Hankin, L. K. Ha nkin, M. H. Hardy, J. .H. Harmon, B. A. Ha rtma n, P. J. Hauer, C. T. Heard, M.A. HeiTner, N. A. Hos te tter, ]. T . Hou ston, ). H. Hull)phrey, A. Hurt, R. B. lannitto, D. D. Ja,-obson, . E. j ames, M. W. Jehl, ]. J. Je nkeluna , P. j . I e nnings, R. S. Je n en, R. W. ]ia nakop]os , S. ]. Kalbacker, J. W. Ka pla n, L. ]. Kara m, E. 13. K earn ~. D. E. Keeney, . H. Keith, V. P. M. Kelley, R. P. K ndri k, M. S. Kenn d y, A. W. Khoury, P. S. Ki ar i, D. R. King,) . A. KnaiJp, S . .R.
23 23 31
Psychology
19 English
14 Soc iology PsycholoM
76 76 31 Economic 14
71 40
77 Political cience
41
Engineerin g Phy ics
41
Hi tory
14 10 61 66
Biology 23 Economics His tor Histo ry 58
77 47
Hi tory
on -\Ves tern
14 61 14 tudies
77 25 26
Psycholo~
66 70 3l 49 26
tud io
rts
66 61 49 32 66 14 41
70 French
Psycbolo~
Engli
66 32 66 Rel igio n Clas ical L nguage
7 36 67
7 14 41 67
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Trinity Ivy 1971 THE EDITORIAL BOARD EDITOR-IN-CHIEF THEODORE J. KOWALSKI ASSOCIATE EDITOR MICHAEL E. TRIGG ASSIST ANT EDITOR F. BRUCE FOXEEY SENIOR SECTION EDITOR JAMES A. KOWALSKI BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN E. HEPPE Staff: R. Adams, C. Adrianowycz; G. Baldwin; Susan Brechlin; D. Daniels; R. Fawber; K. Fink; A. Marchisotto, Editorial Advisor; N. Perugini; W. Robbins, and P. Robiner Photographers: E. Bowe; B. Coleman; A. Dayno; R. Garrett; C. Greaves; L. Hotez; D. Lowe; L. Pistell; J. Prince; and R. Spiegelman. We would like to thank the following staff members for their great photographic contributions: J. Prince, R. Spiegelman; and M. Trigg. We would like to thank Mr. Harold Vaughan, Mrs. Barbara Mitchell of G. Fox & Co., Mrs. Milli Silvestri and the News Bureau and particularly Mr. David Lowe, the College photographer. We are also grateful for the assistance of Mr. Jim Findley of Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill-Paragon. Tht• Editoral Board wishes to acknowledge permission to use material from the following sour<:es: R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience. Pantheon Books. A Division of Random House, Inc., 1967 R. D. Laing, Knots, Pantheon Books1 A Division of Random How.e, Inc., 1970 Ezra Pound, "Salutation the Se<.-ond ·• New Directions Publishing Corporation Wallace Stevens, The Collected Poerm of Walwce Steve11S, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.. 1954
Printed By
BRADBURY, SAYLES, O'NEILL-PARAGON College and Independent Sehool Affiliate of Poro90n p,_, IIIC.