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Kenyon Collegian College Archives Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange The Kenyon Collegian College Archives 10-27-1936 Kenyon Collegian - October 27, 1936 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - October 27, 1936" (1936). The Kenyon Collegian. 1738. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/1738 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the College Archives at Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Kenyon Collegian by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. t KENYON TO BATTLE OBERLIN FOR OHIO AMATEUR GRID CHAMPIONSHIP SATURDAY Kenyon Coll KEWOX COLLflUK, ATI It IE It, OHIO, OCTOBER 87, 13 SO. 6 THESPIANS AT WORK RENEW RIVALRY . B. SHAW OPUS BATING BACK TO '96 "Androcles and the Only Two Ohio Colleges s Lion" Scheduled for Ranked as Amateurs by-Tuni- Presentation on Nov. 4 Clash at Oberlin The lights in Xn Pi Kappa All roads will lead to Ober- Hall are burning late these Fall lin, Ohio, Saturday, where the ninhts, for there is much work Amateur Football Champion- bei- to be done. Two plays are ship of Ohio will be determin- ng readied for early performa- ed when the simon-pur- e gentle- nce, and Director John W. men of Kenyon College match Black is no easy master. The QUSSELL Q. their unsullied thoroughbred first of the two, "Androcles gr'.i&z. TOT-HILL- . morals, muscles,' and brains And The Lion," will be shown against the equally unadulter- a week from tomorrow night, ated gridmen of Oberlin Col- through college. Seven of group, Gray, November 4th. Kenyon's current bumper the ten Carlton, Crumrine, lege. The second, "The Racket," will crop of Phi Beta Kappas pro- elected are employed in the Col- Morgan and being enrolled in the Kenyon and Oberlin will make lege Commons. No study been be given exactly two weeks later vides a distinct contrast to the has economics department, with Bau- football history Saturday. of made of the effect of tray-carryin- g on the 18th of November. traditional conception what and in The winner will go down in all prove ser, Stamm, Cadwell Gruber The first play holds our attention a Phi Beta Kappa is. There's on the intellect, but it should the journals of sportsdom as Ray Riebs is in his- the horn-rimme- d a chemistry. the (or the present time, however. Int- not a pair of spec- fertile field for experiment, in first bona fide amateur football tory department while Tut-hil- l erested students may avail thems- tacles in this lot of Phi Betes view of above facts. (Dr. Rigg, John champion of Ohio. elves of the selection of books now who represent a cross-sectio- n note.) is in philosophy. Kenyonites Amateurs so- The of in al- at the library suggested by the of the campus, athletically, large number Phi Betes It is also significant that, Kenyon and Oberlin are the only Lio- the present also Heme of "Androcles And The cially, and academically. senior class is though the college as a whole is colleges in the vast state of Ohio n," by its author, Bernard Shaw, Many of this unusual group are causing conjecture as to whether overwhelmingly in favor of Lan- that observe the real traditions of out- '37 and by-th- e type of drama it is. athletes. Bob Stamm is the the class of is really the best don, an informal poll of the Phi amateur sport, according to a re- Kenyon Some advance reading will give standing example of the athletic class that ever entered Betes shows that they are a cent classification published by in College. The group of the auditor a far better understand-in- ? Phi Bete, having earned letters Phi Beta staunch group of Roosevelt fol John R. Tunis, noted sports com twenty of the various motifs used by football, basketball and tennis; Kappas constitute per cent owers. mentator. It is only fitting and of present class, and an- Shaw as well as of the. play itself. Bill Morgan in basketball and the senior ten Their ideas are thus in direct proper that these last two surviv- basket- per 1937 Ia brief, however, we may say track; Carl Crumrine in cent of the class of which tithesis with the stand taken by ors of amateur football in Ohio to years ago. that Shaw has taken an ancient ball; Russell Gruber in tennis. came Gambier four the University of Chicago's "brain should meet on the pigskin battle- ' Cad-wel- l, of every legend known in many countries Clyde Bauser, Leonard With one out five seniors trust" faculty in declaring in favor field to decide whether this brand - and Ray and Sam Carlton carry a Phi Bete key there real- of Landon, in accord languages, and written into it Riebs but with the or that brand of simon-pur- e grid a social and philosophical message tactics shall reign supreme. ot considerable worth. It is that The big, avaricious, professional familiar story of the fellow who, NO HORN-RIMME- D SPECTACLES? teams of Notre Dame, Minnesota, hile walking through the forest, Harvard, Ohio State, Cincinnati U., comes upon a lion distressed by a and others have hogged the sports large thorn in its paw. He removes have also played basketball. Bau- ly seems to be little argument Princeton faculty's backing of spotlight too long. Good old ama- the thorn, thus obtaining the aff- ser and Cadwell played on the base- about where the class of the col- Roosevelt. teur football is once more the ection of the lion and resulting in ball team last spring while John lege is, say the seniors. They are The Phi Beta Kappa initiation is vogue, but there are po amateur convenient, if not surprising, co-Continu- ed gridmen in Tuthill was on the track team. also pointing to the number of ath- scheduled for Monday, November 2 left Ohio to play the on Page 4 game except The group is also active in other letes in the class, . the number of at a banquet in Peirce Hall. Ber- those of Kenyon and: Oberlin. And fields besides athletics. Ray Riebs leaders in college activities. nard Fay, world-fame- d author, is the football fans of Ohio INQUIRING and John Tuthill are president and The geographical distribution of the speaker who has been engaged will overflow the stadium at treasurer, respectively, of the Ken- the "brains" boys seems to indi- for the banquet. Mr. Fay is particu- Oberlin Saturday afternoon to wit- REPORTER ness yon Singers. Tom Gray is football cate that "birds of a feather flock larly known for his biographies of the season's only amateur classic. It will be a Quertion: Who will win the and basketball manager, as well as together." North Hanna and Middle great historical figures such as Jef- colossal battle; one on which all Kenyon men Presidential race this fall, and business manager of the Collegian. Hanna claim the lion's share of the ferson, Franklin and Washington. and Khy? Russell Gruber is president of the cademic honors, contributing four He is also an intimate friend of alumni will bet their last pair of fur-line- d underwear. Fritz Taylor, President of the PhilOmathesian literary society. men each to the group, while North President William Foster Peirce, The mighty amateur Student Assembly: I Four of them, Gruber, Crumrine, Leonard and Middle Leonard each having served with him in France teams of "Landon, Kenyon - EhopeStuPresilNmh Stamm and Morgan, are members supply one. All of them hail from during the World war. Mr. Fay will and Oberlin have been mh hm settling gridiron ''Pe. I believe this because the of the Kenyon Klan, college letter-man'- s Ohio, except Sam Carlton. John also deliver a lecture to the entire differences since al- 1896. The Oberlin Wintry has recovered the organization. Tuthill is really an Ohioan, student body on the same evening, dandies had one from or two professionals hteria of the depression." Another surprising fact is the though he now lives in Buffalo. speaking at 8 p. m. in Philo Hall in their midst Dave on and managed to subdue Jasper, Editor of the Hika: large number of the Phi Betes who There is also concentration in the "The Balance Sheet of the Lords of consistently until "Roosevelt, because there are more are earning all or part of their way academic departments, four the last season. "Scrappy" Lambert piloted Mr men than rich in the country, the 1 they Purple Pures last year, and they ain't got much sense anyh- ow!" ,immmm,iywy, a mm)m nwvqgw rose up and smote Oberlin 13-- 0. Karl !fiwm-- Heroes Brown and Sammon Brunt, Honors Student: There was much celebrating landon, because the country and tee4s merry-makin- g on a man of common sense, and the Hill on that tot of theory." historic occasion. Harry Brown and Texas" Rooster Sammon were Reeder, from the Lone the most ar State amateurish of the amateurs, and , 'Nut said: "Roosevelt, se were the heroes of many he's a real man, upright and toasts for several weeks following p0nest He's out to Kenyon's make the G. O. titanic triumph. like the Sammon heaved bunch of hayseeds two passes Datthey are!" and Brown caught both over the Oberlin goal Jh" Whitaker, Fuzzy: "What line to ac- count for the Lords' successful con- ffickU talk'ng ab0Ut' Down in the ' 3 quest of their simon-pur- e here I come neigh- from, they're bors.
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