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Page 35 text:
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The return of Beer in May of 1933 was met with wild acclaim by Trinity men. A picture on the front page of the Hartford Times showed enthusiasts bending el- bows at one Max Scher's emporium. Trinity students could be discerned among the numerous bottles. Final exams came upon us, and it is well understood that nothing of historical importance happens during the exam period. The one hundred and seventh com- mencement called a halt to the happenings at Trinity for the year 1932-33. The summer months sped along and the time again approached to continue the search for knowledge and wisdom . The 1937 class was duly welcomed and ter- rified, rushing was completed, and all took up the compulsory hob-nobbing with the professors. Marcel Dupre, under whom Mr. Clarence Watters, college organist, studied in Paris, gave a series of recitals on the Chapel organ in October, 1933. Attentive and appreciative audiences listened to his selections, realizing their privilege of listen- ing to a world-renowned master. The football team closed a remarkably successful season with four victories. Wesleyan and Amherst were among the defeated teams. A frenzy of excitement followed the Wesleyan game, which victory was the first in seven years over our traditional rivals. There is talk of giving receptions to members of the Middletown Police force prior to the next contest at Wesleyan so that they may obtain introduc- tions to 'l'rinity's notables and thereby use discretion in the swinging of shillalahs. The Armistice Day Chapel service proved to be an array of flags and illustrious speakers. Governor Cross was among the notables present, being supported by the Governor's Foot Guard Band. Dr. Ogilby preached an appropriate sermon on Faith and Fear . The service closed with an organ recessional arrangement of the Battle Hymn of the Republic. On November 26 a blaze of undetermined origin broke out in Northam Towers. The Hartford Fire Department took its stand 'neath the elms and poured water 29
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Page 34 text:
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It was during October and November, 1932 that the Tripod affair took place at college. Because of a misunderstanding between Editor-in-Chief of the Trrfipod and Dr. Ogilby, a forbidden article concerning Lord Cecil was printed in the Trripod. The suspension penalty meted out to the Editor was considered by the country's leading newspapers as a threat to the freedom of the press at Trinity. Work progressed on the Chapel tower, which lacked about fifteen feet of its in- tended height of one hundred and sixty-three feet. The Carillon was fully encased by January, 1933. Landscaping was being improved about the chapel and college grounds, so that with the coming of spring the area about the chapel would be ready to be sown with grass seed. Porter Emerson Brown's The Bad Man , a satirical comedy, was staged by the Jesters on January 14. The plot was complicated and bewildering, and the audience was often uncertain which one was the bad man . Il Circolo Dante, the Trinity College club fostering Italian culture, was formed in the early part of January. The meetings contain discussions about Marco Polo, Leonardo Da Vinci, Boceaccio, St. Francis of Assisi, Garibaldi, Mussolini, Balbo, Al Capone, etc. Judge Buffington, a Trinity graduate, wrote to the Society lauding its aims. He was subsequently elected Honorary Consul of the Club for the year 1933. By a vote of the Trustees, the outdoor Pulpit on the South Side of the Tower was designated as a memorial to Dr. Flavel S. Luther. As Dr. Luther was a great preacher, the pulpit made an appropriate memorial, for it was he who gloried in out- door services. Trinity students and alumni were pleasantly surprised to learn from Dr. Ogil- by's annual report to the Trustees that, in the rating of the American Council of Education at Washington, D. C., Trinity's rating among representative colleges and universities throughout the country rose from sixteenth place to second place be- tween the fall of 1931 and 1932. Yes, it was the 1935 class that arrived at Trinity in the fall of 1931. What has become of the Lemon Squeezer? The spring of 1933 was devoted to the search for that traditional object. It was described in '73 as valuable not for its elaborate workmanship, but for the memories which cluster about it . Its cus- tomary transference from class to class since had been halted and its whe1'eabouts unknown. A revival of the traditional transfer was sought, but the object of the transfer kept its hiding place a secret. The fan-mail which rolled in after the radio debate with Wesleyan gave the decision to the Athenaeum Society's debaters. The question, Resolved: That Democracy is an outworn form of Government, was of timely interest. Trinity upheld the negative side of the question and proved that the fundamentals of Demo- cratic government are far from outworn. 28
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Page 36 text:
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into the time honored halls of Freshman Hotel. Mr. Harris Prior in Northam was the recipient of the greater part of the H1'C1T1CH,S attention, while the Atheneum rooms in Northam 2 remained unoccupied for two months following the fire. The ambulance did some broken field running among the elms to take the smoked hero, Fred Ludwig, Doctor of J anitry and Day and Night Watching, to the hospital. The Trinity Trustees appointed Roger Eastman '24, of Woodstock, Vermont, as assistant to President Ogilby. He assumed his office in February, 1934. On January 9 the Scholarship Cup was awarded to the Sigma Nu fraternity for the second successive year. The cup was presented at a meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, and Sigma Nu was complimented upon obtaining the highest per- centage of A's and Bls for two successive years. The comparison between mid-year ratings this year and last reveals an improve- ment in scholarship at Trinity. Although two more dropped out of the freshman class than last year, the number on probation in upper classes dropped from fourteen to three. The unlimited cut list rose from thirty-six to fifty-one. The material for the first half of the 1935 IVY is to bc in the hands of the pub- lisher by March 1. Trinity history continues 5 this account must be dated February 26, 1934. EUS 30
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