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6-5-1964

Kenyon Collegian - June 5, 1964

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Vol. LXXXX, No. 12 Gambier, , 5, June 1964 THIRTY-FIV- E CENTS LUND ASKS FOR STUDY OF

CO-ORDINA- TE COLLEGE PLAN Tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock President Lund will deliver his V annual report to the Board of Trustees. He will recommend further study of the plans to establish a co-ordin- ate college for women. At the meeting Lund will explain the compelling reasons for the expan- sion of Kenyon in such a manner. or - The predictions of Beardsley Ruml and Sidney Tickton, national- ly recognized college authorities, that no college will survive in the .V 1970's as a quality institution which fails to enroll over one thousand students will figure prominently in Lund's presentation. "Barring the unexpected be quest to ," Lund Executive Committee will say, "of a sum sufficient to Gives Recommendations double its income from endow- ment, I have arrived at the con- Commencement Speaker Honorary To Board of Trustees clusion that within the next four Pollard, Degree Recipient McGill, Baccalaureate Preacher Bayne. or five years the undergraduate The establishment of the Den-ha- m enrollment must continue to ex- Sutcliffe Scholarship, dis- - pand beyond the present goal we PHYSICIST - PRIEST TO SPEAK AT tribution of the grant from the have set for 750." McGregor Fund, and employ- - To maintain the quality of a ment of the Vincent G. Kling Kenyon education, a staff incor- - COLLEGE'S 136th COMMENCEMENT architectural up- - firm for the porating both specialization and At its 136th Commencement Institute of Nuclear Studies, and Protestant Episcopal Church in perclass dorm were considered breadth is necessary, despite its Sunday Kenyon will graduate priest-in-char- ge of St. Alban's the , has published by the Executive Committee of expense. "It is primarily due to 144 students and confer 7 honorary Chapel, Clinton, Tennessee. extensively. Kenyon has recogniz- the Board of Trustees in their our attempt to obtain broad di- - degrees, 122 undergraduate de- Pollard holds degrees from the ed him before: in 1960 he was meeting May 23. They will rec versification and comprehension grees and 22 graduate from Bex-le- y University of Tennessee, Rice awarded an honorary degree. ommend to the Trustees at to across each department (not in- Hall. Institute, Ripon College, Univer- Oratory will not be limited to morrow's meeting: variably successful) that has The commencement address sity of the South, Kalamazoo Col- guest speakers, however. After The establishment of the brought the size of the faculty to will be delivered by the Reverend lege, Hobart College, Grinnell the annual meeting of the Alum- - nr. Denham Sutcliffe Scholar- 64, and I maintain that this ap-Co- Dr. William G. Pollard, execu- College, and the University of ni Council Saturday morning, on page 4, Col. 3 Cont. on page 4, Col. 5 tive director of the Oak Ridge Chattanooga. Dean Bruce Haywood will address A noted physicist and clergy- all alumni and their male guests. man, he is the author of The He- In the afternoon he will deliver brew Iliad, Chance and Provi- a second address in Rosse Hall dence, Experiences in Community, Jess Willard Falkenstine to parents, though seniors and and Physicist and Christian. guests are invited. Sunday morning the Right Rev- erend Stephen F. Bayne, Jr., Festivities will include alumni Executive Officer the Anglican meetings, division banquets, a Communion, will address the 1964 senior-facult- y Softball game this graduating class at the baccalau- afternoon, a reception by the r reate services in the College President honoring the graduat-Con- t. 0 Chapel. Bayne, a bishop of the on page 4, Col. 3

:' SUMMER FESTIVAL TO SEEK CULTURAL THA W

Plans for a Kenyon-Moun- t Vernon Festival, a summer of cultural events and activities, was announced to the Collegian this week. Mr. James Michael, chairman of the drama department and developer of the program, said he hoped to have the project begin in the sum- mer of 1966. V CENTRAL TO THE program Repertory Comedy, a are The of SENATE SHORTENS RUSH; program of "human comedy"

field-hous- FRIEND plays to be presented in the e ALTERS DRINKING RULES MAN COACH at Kenyon, and The Dan Jess W. Falkenstine, Director Skip Falkenstine was Ken-yon- 's The Kenyon family had al- Emmett Story, an historical play The Campus Senate adopted of Athletics, died of a heart at- Director of Athletics, ready suffered many losses by abounding in music, dancing, and rush period dates, altered alcohol tack last Friday evening at his head baseball coach, and as- late Spring. We were still spectacle, based on stories and privileges at the first closed rush father's home in Morgantown, sistant football coach. These grieving. Surely there would legends of the region. The second party, and published two docu- - West Virginia, following a 25th were the obvious things about be a long period of respite. phase of the project, it will tell ments: the Objectives of Kenyon reunion dinner at his alma him, but it is difficult to ex- Death is the central fact of our the story of Daniel Decatur Em- - College and Fraternity Responsi- - mater, West Virginia Univer- press the deep impression that life, but as Pascal said we do mett, author of several well- - bilities. thinking sity. He was 47. Skip has made on those of us everything to avoid known popular songs, ("Dixie" The first rush parties will be Athletic director since 1958, who really knew him. His gift about it. This year some of us "Bluetail Fly") and originator of September 18 next year. Fresh- - Falkenstine came to Kenyon in to the students is partly tan- did not succeed in displacing the minstrel show as a theatrical man will submit preference lists it. Even those 4. 1952 from Rensselaer Polytech- gible, and yet the greatest por- the thought of form. It would be performed October This year rush began nic Institute. In recent years tion of it is indefinable. Cer- of us least inclined to melan- nightly during the summer in October 4 and continued until Oc- - might be - he was head baseball coach tainly, it was he who realized choly wondered who Memorial Theater in Mount Ver- tober 20. The Senate eliminated it would be and a backfield coach in foot- the need for a new football called next. That non. a second week of Round Robin nobody could ball. field and worked as hard as Jess Falkenstine The comedy acting company in parties requested by the Inter- - thought. -- Holding the anyone to obtain it. It was possibly have Gambier will be a relatively small fraternity Committee. This, along Darlington was nothing to pre- Greene chair in physical edu- also Skip who considered ath- There one, made up of actors who can with the earlier opening of the shock. Skip ex- - cation and athletics, he was to letics and physical education pare us for this "respond to the challenge and college year, accounts for the young and looked even become a full professor at the an integral part of the liberal was citement of this repertory and this early closing date of rush, of younger. He was a dynamic location" as Mr. Michael said this Hard liquor may be served beginning of the 1964-6- 5 aca- education. Being on one his as the men on his teams include demic year. teams was truly an education man, week. The ensembles will at the final party only, changing attest. His bowling com- present policy permitting He received his doctorate in in itself. Skip could overlook can several performers with names the witnessed his skill well-know- n to draw at non-Rou- nd education from Michigan State some of his boys' indiscretions panions sufficiently hard liquor Robin every week. There were no considerable dist- - parties. action on the use University in 1957 and obtained without compromising his the public from Further 6, 1 -- 2 Cont. on page Col. range of plays will be of alcohol is expected next year. Cont. on page 4, Col. 1 Cont. on page 4, Col. ance. The Cont. on page 4, Col. 1 Cont. on page 3, Cot. 5 JUNE 5, 1964 PAGE TWO THE KENYON COLLEGIAN

Self-Stud-y Incomplete Editorial Consultants W. Henry Webster, Jr.

r- Barry M. Bergh Despite the frantic attempts to cure the maladies -r "t which plague Kenyon College, these maladies are still Ai tfcyVyJ Assistant Editors John E. Schofield critically evident. Among other things, a revamped stu- Vir Hillary Johnson dent government and a new and dynamic Dean of the Kenyon n , College have failed to remedy the causes of Kenyon's J AvEy Managing Editor David.AuMouat, Jr. paraylsis. freshman orientation program developed SINCE 1 858 . The new CollesianO Editors Emeriti P. Frederick Kluge BI-WEEK- last summer is only a beginning in the affront on the A LY John J. Camper problem of integrating the entering students into Ken- Thomas F. Black yon life. The elimination of freshman hazing closed one Business Manager William G. Lerchen, III immediately hurl- avenue of social integration. The class, Edi,or D' David Lona Advertising Manager Edward J. Forrest, Jr. social whirl of rush, had no chance to adjust ed into the Associate Editor Alan R. Vogeler, Jr. John J. Buckley, Jr. to the peculiar problems of Kenyon life. This necessitat- circuafion Manager of ed the Campus Senate's investigation into the effects The Collegian utilizes the resources of the College News Bureau. hard liquor parties during rush. CAMPUS SENATE IS A NEWLY organized The only way that democracy can be made bearable is by developing and cherishing a class of men sufficiently hon- THE in strength in the United body designed to bring together the students, faculty, est and disinterested to challenge the prevailing quacks. No such class has ever appeared States. Thus, the business of htfrassing the quacks devolves upon the newspapers. When they fail in their duty, which and administration in a body which can then formulate is usually, we are at the quack's mercy. H. L. Mencken, in Minority Report and pass legislation on all matters of campus life. This year it has succeeded only in discussing, in closed ses- sions, such questions as "What is a party?" It has failed in any instance to discuss or formulate any effective to the Editor legislation and has become a forum for the opinions of Letter NOTES FROM NOWHERE only those who are members. The new faculty-stude- nt Judicial Board, lacking any firm body of rules and regulations with which to work, REVEILLE Errata So you have Nothing, as the soft velvety Nothing. Quite some- had to rely on opinions of the various members to the year ends? Well, that's quite thing. And if now you go to the decide was an effective punishment for a certain To the Editor: what something. Think of what God top of the stairs in the dark and Consequently, judgments were fre- violation. their Interested persons may note the out of Nothing. Nothing reach down to feel it, what will inconsistent and arbitrary. Obviously disapprov- made quently following typographical errors in comes from nothing, some fool you feel? Nothing, of course. The ing of actions of the Judicial Board, the Student the their copies of A Dusty Path. said. The truth is that Nothing whole point is that it's palpably Council, instead of drawing up a framework in which the is the great Mother of Every- there. And, like Alice, surely you Board could operate, chose to re-appointm- ent Page 58 SEAL, read 1937 for Judicial thing. What would God have done have looked down the road for only one student member and submitted a list of totally 1903 without Nothing? What then something and seen Nothing. So new faculty for President Lund's approval. Page 84 line seven accidently candidates could he have made the world you too are to be congratulated This reaction is not necessarily constructive. Doesn't it repeated out of? Nothing. (You can't get for having such good eyes. May- attempt to cure symptoms of causes? Page 92 read Dempsey for the instead the away from it, going or coming). be you have noticed that, in some Another organ of campus government is the pathetic Dempsy. Haven't you ever climbed a lights, nothing is as beautiful as Student Council, its authority and effectiveness ham- The quotation on page 50 refers stairway in the dark and, taking Nothing. strung by the mandate of the Campus Senate. It has to the dedication of Delano Hall one step up too many, stepped on So, as the year ends, we say succeeded in wasting the Monday evenings of its mem- at the Kenyon Military Academy Nothing? So Nothing was there thanks for Nothing and the hell bers, and little else. relies heavily on a Planning Com- It 1881. Though H. N. Hills was at the top of the stairs, with a with Everything. mittee whose only effective investigation all year was in one of the directors of the school, surprise for you. A bit of dark, Virgil C. Aldrich ss negated by administration decision the new up-percla- the that not rightly be considered dorm will house at least one fraternity. The it can the Military Academy until the days to suspension for ten days, Deke Award To Lentz Planning Committee did not seek to explore campus wth denial of drinking privileges resignation of Professor Rust Perry Lentz was chosen for the opinion on the decisive issues of this year such as fresh- for a semester. from the college faculty and his Leadership man hazing and clarification of rules. We are sorely COUNCIL SENT TO THE Cam- subsequent introduction of a mili- Trophy. awaiting the emergence of a Student Council which ef- pus Senate eight proposed amend- tary curriculum in 1885. At the Made annually to one of 25,000 fectively represents the student in campus government. ments to the Constitution, most of construction of Delano Hall, the students in the 46 chapters of the THE FACULTY AND STUDENT GOVERN- them with little debate. The official name of the school was national fraternity, the award is MENTS of this College, in their attempts to solve all amendments are as follows: 1) to Milnor Hall, the Preparatory De- given on the bases of leadership their problems, have dumped them into the Dean of Stu- make the Secretary and Treasur- partment of Kenyon College. It ability, activities office. The has renounced professional ng extracurricular dent's faculty its er of Student Council non-voti- was commonly referred to as the and scholarship. responsibility for extensions on course papers, and the members and to grant the Presi- Co-valedicto- Grammar School. rian of his class, he Student Council has typically flung the decision on dent a vote only in the case of a John Hattendorf '64 graduates Sunday summa cum freshman hazing into the Dean's office. tie; 2) to make the Treasurer of College Archivist laude with Highest Honors in The only one who has accepted his responsibilities, the Student Council a voting English. and perhaps gone beyond them, is the new Dean of the member of the Publications College. He has attempted to deal effectively with the 3) to va- COUNCIL PROPOSES Board; require that if PSYCHOLOGY GRANT problems of improving the faculty and with the evident cancies occur in the Student problem of student motivation. This community still Kenyon a matching AMENDMENTS Council offices they be filled by has received awaits a practicable remedy to the problem. Under the a general election of the student grant of $8005 from the National new Dean we have seen widespread changes in academic pur- body if one-four- th of the students Science Foundation for the In its closing meetings, the Stu- policy, especially on the freshman level. What ails Ken- so petition; 4) to clarify the role pose of strengthening and ex- was primarily con- yon College in this sphere is the lack of communication dent Council of the Student Assembly in mak- panding laboratory instruction cerned with prob- between administration and student body. Dean Hay- constitutional ing proposals; 5) to allow the and individual student research wood's phan- lems. At its May 4 meeting, busy schedule has necessitated his being a Student Council to demand a re- in the department of psychology the Campus tom Dean. He has failed to explain his policies to the Council heard that ferendum on any issue; 6) to The College will add an equal rejected a constitu- student body or to seek their understanding or approval. Senate had clarify the elections of members sum, bringing the total amount to We hope speech tional amendment earlier pro- of that his to senior's parents tomorrow is of the Campus Senate; 7) to al- be used for the purchase of posed by Council to require the the beginning a series of explanations. low the Student Council to make equipment to $16,010. Professor is co-ordina- ted to publish sum- What lacking at Kenyon is a and Judicial Board its own rules of procedure; and Cummings, chairman of the psy- pragmatic decisions. The Sen- approach to our maladies. What is needed is maries of its 8) to clarify the powers of the chology department, says the new a a joint general consulation, a faculty and student and admin- ate suggested that instead Elections Committee. equipment will complete his d- istration diagnosis of this campus. No one individual or letter be sent to the Board by epartment's development program. committee can remove itself from the mainstream of Council and Senate urging the IN THE LAST few years, the Kenyon life to recognize the value of to analyze any one aspect of this problem. Board SENIOR SOCIETY ELECTS psychology department has in- is Self-Stud- y What called for is a of the Kenyon student promulgating rulings. Council creased its facilities by taking the outside sending of a the academic life. If we can be brutally honest approved the such NEW MEMBERS entire second floor of the Samuel with ourselves academically, certainly we can honestly letter. Mather Science Hall, by adding prescribe for 11 meeting, Six juniors were elected to the the illness whose symptoms are, aside from AT THE MAY a man to the teaching staff general Senior Society for the coming third student indifference, 51 of the freshman class Council read the Judicial Board's and by having its operating bud- with deficiency reports, academic year at the Society's more students on probation than reply: that its decisions and get increased. ever before, the highest attrition rate in the history of meetings would remain secret, final meeting last week. College They were: Skip Backus, Salim the last year (23 in the freshman class), 'fac- but asserted that any member of The Public Relations Office de- Lone, Fred McGavran, Tom Sant, ulty indifference, brought on by huge classes which they the Board could explain any will have Kenyon College pic- unwilling Dave Thomas, and Al Vogeler. are to section, and negligence of professorial cision, that only on exceptional tures for sale during com- THE SOCIETY, ACCORDING duty in determining whether to grant extensions for occasions would the Board pub- mencement week end. papers, and of a deci- to the college catalogue "is a the crises approach which the administration lish any explanation The pictures, taken by How- takes to practically at small self-perpetuati- ng organiza- every problem facing it. sion, and that the end of each ard Earl Day of St. Louis, in- publish a tion composed of outstanding IN THE FINAL ANALYSIS, no one group or per- year the Board would clude aerial shots of the cam- son men in the Senior Class, chosen can claim to be a specialist on this disease. Only resume of its work. pus, photographs of the build- through collective effort Hamilton announced for their leadership in campus and examination from discre- President ings and the Village, and pho- pant viewpoints ob- activities. The group meets with can any diagnosis be made or prescrip- that hereafter the Council's tographs of Spring Dance tion the Faculty Council and the rendered. server to the Judicial Board will Week End. The Self-Stud- y program President of the College on occa- had its successes but also report in addition on major cases They will be on display in its severe oversights. sion to discuss affairs of common Some people have considered the tried by the Dean of Students. the Norton Room in Ransom co-ordin- ate women's college to The re- concern for the improvement of be the panacea for our observer, Bob Schwartz, Hall where orders will be ills. They should remember ported the College." that such equivocal answers that the Dean and the taken. The cost is one dollar are six years away, and will Board had a of that it bring problems of its handled total Retiring members are John per print. All pictures will be own. What is now needed is a co-ordinat- ed seven of systematic and violations women's hours, Camper, Don Hcbb, Bill Hyllon, mailed to the buyer by end approach to the the study of problems of life in the and had handed out sentences Fred Kluge, Dave Schmid, and of June. Kenyon environment. ranging from suspension for four Jeff Way. JUNE 5, 1964 THE KENYON COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE

FACULTY AND STUDENTS DELIA TAU DELIA WINS SHARE COLLEGE HONORS INTERFRATERNITY SING , ,. Over a hundred spectators wit-Departi- ng from a long tradition of reserving the Honors Day nessed a revival of competitive for recognition of superior students, President Lund made the first fraternity singing by eight of the tribute at the May 11 to convocation Dr. Richard Salomon emerit,,. lo ,;; professor of history. liaLtHllULS J CLCIIU, Delta Tau Delta was awarded Dr. Salomon was awarded a first place certificate of membership by the honors in the competi- tion by faculty Hamburg Historical Society. "The NEW COLLEGIAN judges Frank Lendrim, James Hamburg Historical Society, on Michael, Franklin Miller, Paul Trescott the 125th anniversary of its EDITOR APPOINTED and Gerrit Roelofs. The Delts sang founding, nominates Professor the "Delt by Hank Webster Marching Song" and "Kokosing," Richard Salomon to honorary Illustrations by Pat McCulloh embellish the book. Michael Burr was elected edi a Kenyon College song. Kappa membership in the Society Phi in tor of the Collegian for the year Sigma recognition won second place of many -- his years of 13U1-00 ai me May meeting lz Each fraternity sang a frater- significant and devoted research of the Publications Board. The GAMBIER GOURMETS nity song while marching down in the history of the City Ham- Man-kowi- of other candidates were Carl tz Middle Path from the Marriott burg." and Jay Levenson. Park gates and another song of Forced to flee from Germany The Board found the PUBLISH COOK BOOK decision its own choosing upon arriving in 1937 after a career in quite difficult. Both Mankowitz research at Old Kenyon. The event, held Is fried mush a la Navaho in A favorite of President Ruther- and teaching in Hamburg, Dr. and Levenson presented impres- on Sunday, May 15, was spon- grapefruit juice an unsuccessful ford B. Hayes, 1842, is to be found Salomon began a second career sive portfolios, outlining their sored by the Interfraternity Com- breakfast attempt by Saga Bob or (p. Ill) along with contributions in the United States teaching at plans and expectations. a Burr's mittee of Student Council. Ken true delicacy (p. 148)? What from Novice Fawcett, '31, Presi- the University of Pennsylvania, presentation, as usual, was verbal. Hammister '48 provided two kegs does Gerrit Roelofs love (p. 1)? dent of Ohio State University, Swarthmore, and Bryn Col- - He pledged to continue pres- - Mawr the of Micholob beer which were What's a lifesaver when enter- actress Katherine Cornell, great leges before coming to ent policy of "scream in private, - Kenyon awarded to the winnng fraternity taining Kenyon students (p. 59)? granddaughter of Kenyon Presi- twenty-fiv- e years ago. - never in print". If successfully He spe- and the I.F.C. provided the par- What did the Harcourt girls like dent David Bates Douglass as well cialized maintained, pledge prom- - in Medieval, east Euro- - Burr's ticipants two kegs, which were (p. 105)? How does one shell an as a host of other notable hosts pean, and ises another year of Den- - church history, as well "promoting tapped after the sing. egg easily (p. 64)? What is and hostesses, as paleography. without provoking" Collegians, ham Sutcliffe's celebrated French The "For Men Only" section STUDENTS DID WELL them- but this remains to be seen. fry recipe (p. 155))? Will Sam contains a number of intriguing selves. Edward Ordman distin- Carl Mankowitz, former Col- ANDERSON CUP Cummings Bombay punch ("ideal recipes as well as two unique guished both himself and the legian errand boy, reporter, news for the last day of school") make items from the pen of Kenyon's College by winning three separate editor, assistant editor, and man- AWARDED SUNDAY you blind (p. 159)? What can one founder, Bishop , Dan-fort- aging editor, took Burr's victory expect at John Kushan's dinner These items were found recently national fellowships a h The Malcolm Anderson Cup, Foundation Fellowship, a with his usual philosophic calm. for six (p. 157)? in a secret compartment of a Kel-logg-Klu- given annually to under- Mankowitz, disciple of the ge the These important questions and writing desk used by the Bishop, National Science Foundation Fel- graduate who has done most lowship, and a set, was overheard many others are answered in the One of the recipes is for Cowslip Woodrow Wilson for Kenyon during current Fellowship. muttering about the prospect of long awaited Gambier Cook Book, Wine, the other for a concoction next year's Colleeian. "Consuma- - year, will be awarded Sunday a collection of nearly 500 recipes called Currant Shrub, which util- - There are two Fulbright Scho- - tion est." Perhaps he is right. at the Senior Class luncheon of the past and present which izes "one gallon of rum or larships: Frank Munger, Jr., An Upon hearing the decison of the at 12:00. Nominees are: John went on sale this week at the brandy." drew Worsnopp. Board, rejoicing Long, haggard Hattendorf, for his develop- Kenyon College Bookshop. Three menus from the late ment of college archives, In addition to Ordman, the gra- and worn, struck a feeble pose and the Published by the Women of nineteenth century give an idea to organized duating class included five other stared off into the distance, one from neglect an Harcourt Parish and edited by of the epicurism of sixty years collection of college mementos Woodrow Wilson Fellowship win- hand raised palm up, almost in Mrs. Robert Daniel and Mrs. ago. President Rutherford B. (story on page 5) ; Water-sto- n, ners. Kenneth Gregg, Frederick supplication; he muttered in a John Dorothy Longaker, the cook book Hayes was toastmaster at for his work on the Cam- meet-ou- Kluge, Perry Lentz, Frank Mun- wavering voice: contains contributions from fam- - the Kenyon College Alumni s . . pus Senate Committee on stu- - ger, Jr., and Jeffrey Way were . 'tis our fast intent To shake alumni, faculty members, ing' at which the meal began Andy Worsnopp, for all declared recipients. Alexander all cares and business from our Morale; dents and friends of the College with Blue Point oysters on the

to at , a- white-broa- d. McNamara lengthened the list of age, Conferring them on younger his contribution dramatics throughout this country and - menu, including planked Kenyon; and the Collegian - scholarship winners by earning a strengths while we Unburdened Distinctive original lino- fish, fillet of beef, roast plover and staff, publication: German Government Grant. crawl toward death. for its John leum block prints have been used assorted other goodies, It is hoped that the College Crowe Ransom: A Tribute on the cover and to illustrate the The cook book is a complete one The Robert Prize Frost Poetry will experience a more peaceful from the Community of Letters. 174 page book. They are the work and gives readers a sense of bet-o- f was awarded this year to Michael unburdening. Pat McCulloh. ter things than Peirce Hall. O'Brien, Jr.; the Ashford Me- - DrlltitTenttlXTold- - WISSMAN WINS GULF 0'L GRANTS enoerg. ine raui iNewman iro in the Robert Bowen Brown Gal- - ne Gull Oil Corporation pre- - trom page 1, Col. 5 phy for the best acting perfor grant of RYERSON PRIZE lery. In addition, the exhibit of sented an unrestricted Though u hag no(. been discussed mance in the current academic paintings, previously $1,700 to the College this week. Bill Wissman won the Ryerson yet aboishment of liquor in the year was given for the third con- hung at the Hill Theater has been One of 692 grants totalling Fine Arts Purchase Prize, given freshmen dorms has been sug- - secutive year to Andrew Wor- moved to the library. The display $500,000, the gift to Kenyon is the to the student exhibiting the best gested by several members of the snopp. remains through the week end. largest made by Gulf to 12 cen- - painting in the art department's Senate in private conversation. THE MOST VALUABLE Judges of the annual Ryerson tral Ohio colleges and universities annual competition. The two documents were only PLAYER Awards for Fall and competition were Mrs. William The awards are made under the presented. Final adoption will not Winter sports were given to Ran- The winning seascape, as well McCulloh, Mrs. Landon Warner, company's aid-to-educat- ion pro- - be until Fall, when the Student dy Livingston in basketball, Bar- as the 2nd and 3rd award paint- - and Michael Birtwhistle. gram. Council, Interfraternity Commit- - ry Jentz in football, Joel Kell-ma- n : tee, and the Faculty Council will in soccer, Michael Claggett have the opportunity of discus- in swimming, and Richard Wort-ma- n sing the pieces. They contain no in wrestling. new material, no great new un- -

Bookshop Awards, annually gi- , derstanding into objectives or responsibilities. primar- ven to students in Kenyon Col- They are ily starting points lege and for "volun- for discussion j: i i i i in next year. tary outstanding intellectual ill j achievement beyond the line of The Senate will concern itself next Fall duty," were awarded this year to r: with further discussion r r of principles and rules of beha- five students: Gerald Clarke, for vior,' the Student Council pro- consistently fine performances as posed constitutional amendments, tenor soloist with the choir and structure lengthened in Rider's latest drawing. The third floor has been removed and the and topics from the Council's Kenyon singers; Gordon the Report on Morale, specifically distinguished ser- Ewald, for his fraternity lodge hours. vice to the Kenyon Singers as Rider Redesigns B.U.CK. Project accompanist and for his solo per- present Dr. basement plans along formances at the organ; John The George S. Rider Co. pre- - ling station on the ed into the A few copies of John Crowe volun- property, with a barber shop. Housing for Hattendorf, for two year's sented new designs for the Bet- - Salomon and Bookstore Ransom: A Tribute from the tary service as College Archivist; n.i fr,r Kpnvnn which will be moved into the 28 tenants is available on the floor. will be Community of are Ford Tucker, for his outstanding plan Monday. Hoping to calm commercial building. Space for second Entrance Letters performances as baritone soloist communjty residents who felt that two small shops are provided in from either end and the oacic. still available. Copies may be ror me uC iwu-ci- al with the choir and the Kenyon the earlier design for the commer- - this plan along wiui provisions iwo oi iuuuis win Book- - for married obtained at the Bookstore, Singers; and Andrew Worsnopp, building would look out of a grocery store and the room suites, perhaps for his skill and discipline as an nrnnnrtinn in thp t f tv,n (nn,n dnrp as in tne original design, n. siuaems. me uuici iuuui win at the Registry in Ransom singles, with private . store has actor in his four years at Kenyon. Rider has removed the third floor major Mount Vernon Hall, and by mail from the inquired about establishing private baths. No lounge is plan- THE HONORS DAY Assembly and s tretched the building from Box Gam- branch in Gambier, and if ned. "What students gain in Collegian, 308, was keynoted by Walt W. Ros- - the alley to East Brooklyn Street. small were realized, the two small privacy they lose in recreational bier, Ohio. Summer orders tow, Counselor of the Department The building will replace present this stores would be combined, pro- facilities," explained President of State and Chairman of the substandard structures in. the will be accepted and mailed the necessary space. A Lund in presenting the new plans. Policy Planning Council, who block. Originally the building site viding parlor and laundry pick- Completion date has been chang- promptly. spoke on "Greatness in the was to include a filling station. beauty fil- - facility have been incorporat- - ed to September '65. 1960's." The plan now is to place the up JUNE 5, 1964 PAGE FOUR THE KENYON COLLEGIAN

of the Laity. Doctor of Divinity lanta Constitution, Atlanta, 'SKIP': MAN AND COACH Commencement , . . The Reverend Arthur W. Georgia, syndicated columnist and Hargate, rector of St. Matthew's distinguished journalist. Doctor of page 1, Col 1 Cont. from page 1, Col. 2 page 1, Col. 5 Cont. from Cont from Episcopal Church, Bedford, New Humane Letters a masters in physical education principles. He knew when it was ing class and parents, a special York, and graduate of Kenyon The Reverend William G. from West Virginia University in time to get down to work and exhibit in the Robert Bowen (A.B. 1936) and Bexley Hall Pollard, executive director of the 1946. During his undergraduate had a unique talent for getting Brown Gallery of the Chalmers (B. D. 1938). Doctor of Divinity Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear days he played third base and his players to give their utmost. Memorial Library, class reunion Ernest R. Hilgard, depart- Studies, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, was active on the football and dinners, a buffet luncheon Sun- ment of psychology, Stanford priest-in-char- ge of St. Alban's easy job. Di- basketball teams. Before entering His was not an day afternoon, the academic pro- University, Palo Alto, California, Chapel, Clinton, Tennessee. Doc- at Kenyon the U.S. Navy in 1941 he taught rector of Athletics cession, and commencement cere- author of Theories of Learning, tor of Laws re- and coached at Morgantown Jun- is not an enviable one, and monies. Psychoanalysis as Science, and Luther H. Tate, Jr., princi- patience, and a ior High School in West Virginia. quires wisdom, A highlight of the ceremonies Introduction to Psychology. Doc- pal, Fieldston School, New York strong of dedication. Skip During five years in the Navy sense will be the awarding "of seven tor of Science City, New York, a graduate of a department Falkenstine was associated with was the head of honorary degrees. Austin McElroy, business Kenyon (A.B., M.A. 1918 Phi which was considered by many the physical training program as The Reverend Francis O. executive, Columbus Ohio, Ken- Beta Kappa) and Harvard Law to superfluous. He to rep- athletic director at Aiea Naval be had Ayres, Clergyman and director of yon alumnus and humanitarian. School, author of Education of the athle- Barracks near Honolulu, and was resent a school in which Parishfield Community, Brighton, Doctor of Laws Gifted in America. Doctor of Hu- actually looked .down physical training officer for the tics, if not Michigan, author of The Ministry Ralph McGill, publisher, At mane Letters regard- Fifth Naval District. His baseball upon, were apathetically ed. job was a thankless team at Aiea was composed al- Often his one terms of rewards, Lund Asks . . . most entirely of major league in material Executive . . . LUNDS PLAN Skip seemed to feel that he Cont. page 1, Col. 2 players. but Cont. from page 1, Col. 1 from was well-pai- d by seeing the ath- is necessary re- Born November 28, 1916 in TO SUMMER proximate size McGregor stu- Morgantown, he was named after letes at Kenyon give something the $25,000 Fund gardless of the size of the of tak- of two respect- the heavyweight boxing cham- themselves instead of just be used for purchase IN AFRICA dent body to provide a is a new pion Jess Willard, who the year ing. Participation in athletics movie projectors and "Weve been wanting to do this able basic liberal arts program." screen Hall. before gained the title from Jack not popular at Kenyon and at video for Rosse for a long time," said Mrs. Lund Because the trend in America is to remain on This was proposed by Film co-educati- onal Johnson in a 26 round match in times it difficult Wednesday when she and the is toward colleges, . to Society Director Havana Cuba. a team which doesn't seem President revealed plans for their men's institutions have failed to winning. For and urged by Campus He is survived by his wife have a chance of the trip to Africa this summer. Leav- get an increase of applications for who considered Senate. Helen and three children: JoAnn the athletes have ing June 12, they will visit South admissions commensurate to the a sport, Skip was a rea- $4,000 to the Fine Divi- edu- Sue, 17; Robert "J", 16; and quitting Arts Africa, Kenya, Tanganyika, and increasing costs of a quality staying out. his sion for development of the Nancy Ann, 10. son for He made Rhodesia, where they will meet cation. In his speech tomorrow team-membe- rs new arts course. con- Funeral services were held realize that there fine their daughter Sigrid and her Lund will state that "The is more to athletics what $8,005 to the psychology de- ines- Tuesday at the College Chapel. than husband Hutch Hodgson '60. clusion, therefore, appears shown in the win-lo- se column. partment to match the Na- capable that expanding our stu- Interment was in Mount Hope "Dr. Lund's dissertation was on Quitting a team was letting him tional Science Foundation dent body to include women ap- cemetery in Lansing, Michigan South history, down. grant made earlier. African the British pears vastly more feasibly than Wednesday. companies he The balance be used for cost 'charter there, and merely to add men!" accepted a teaching posi- One of his greatest achieve- of consultants and for archi- almost Yet the President is concerned tion in South Africa. ments was gaining for athletics tectural studies and plans for At the last with preserving the Kenyon tra- accept co-ordin- ate moment he decided to an Festival , , , the respect which it now has. At a new college for ditions which have developed in one time, it has been said, few women. appointment to Yale, and my de- Cont. from page 1, Col. 4 the past century and a half. He people at Kenyon cared whether Vin- sire to see Africa has been de- The engagement of the will additionally offer ". . . to me from Charley's Aunt to The Cher- Kenyon team played. layed now. I am really anx- or not a cent G. Kling firm of Phila- until personally there is one last com- ry Orchard, from The Comedy of But a good example of the growth delphia to make preliminary ious to go." pelling argument. Something at Errors to Candida, from Aristo- of interest in Kenyon's teams is studies for construction of a President Lund will spend part Kenyon College, call it a tradi- phanes to Ionesco. last year's football game with new upperclass dormitory. of his time investigating the tion of one hundred forty years, THE FOUNDING BOARD of Mount Union. The weather was The Collegian was assured that problems of South Africa. He has call it the ethos of a small col- Trustees, including President freezing cold and Kenyon hadn't the Kling firm is a major cam- made arrangements to see repre- lege, would be destroyed if we Lund, Mrs. Landon Warner and thirty-fiv- e beaten Mount Union in pus construction organization with sentatives of the religious-rac- e merely expanded (however care- Mr. Michael representing the Col- years. Yet, on that cold buildings on the campuses of groups, through the South Afri- fully and gradually) to 1200 men, lege, is chaired by Harold John- night, many besides the students Swarthmore, Haverford, Marietta can Institute of Race Relations, or indeed, if we established a sec- son of Cooper-Bessem- er and in- in the stands were the head of and many others. to hear government leaders ex- ond college just for men. The cludes prominent members of the the English department, the Dean The blind insensitivity and lack plain their side of the apartheid same argument, of course, would Mount Vernon business and cul- of the College, and the Registrar. of imagination so obvious in re- situation, and to visit South Afri- hold true if we simply developed tural community. The Trustees They had no reason for being in cent buildings will perhaps not be can writers, among them Alan along the conventional patterns envision the festival as important Alliance that night other than repeated. Paton and Nadime Gordimer. for co-educati- on." not only to the lives and needs that of seeing the game. Skip had The Board will also hear of the The trip will not be entirely "To conclude: my earnest re- cultural, spiritual, intellectual, made the success or of failure successful completion of the Ken- for pleasure. An application has commendation to the Board of aesthetic, social of a much larger Kenyon's teams important to the yon Fund drive. The goal of 1250 been received from a student in Trustees is that we proceed forth- community than the one repre- members of the college commu- contributors and $40,000 by May Kenya, and the President will in- with to authorize further study sented by Knox County. They nity. 1 was bettered. As of June 3 1390 of the plans to establish a co-ordin- ate hope to a thousand people terview the student there. draw alumni had contributed $44,770 college for women with a day into the county. With the loss of Skip, Kenyon "We alternate between over- including the challenge grant the understanding that the cur- "WE EXPECT THE Kenyon-Mou- nt has lost one seas trips and continental fishing of its truly outstand- made by the 90 member Alumni riculum, the location and design Vernon to show in expeditions each summer. In some Festival ing personalities. No one will Council. The drive closes June 30. of the new campus and buildings, a graphic and eloquent way how of the trout fishing places we ever possess his rare combination Promotions for Kenyon faculty the financing, and the phasing of a small American community and have gone, we've had to chase of abilities and personal magne- will include: William McCulloch enrollment will all be clearly de- a good small college can join moose off the path. We're usu- tism. He has some- to associate professor, Charles fied before any further authori- hands to satisfy the needs of the contributed ally six miles from anything. So Hamilton to associate professor, zation will be requested. Indeed mid-wes- t. It will provide a meet- thing permanent by giving his perhaps Africa will not come as a and Leonard Miller to assistant the planning itself may well take ing place for young people inter- athletic teams and the rest of the surprise to us." professor. a year or two, and the financing ested in the arts, particularly the College a feeling athletics They will return August 12. that A sabbatical leave will be ap- and building quite probably an- arts of the all over theater.from are and should be a significant proved for , re- other two to three years or more." the world, and in so doing helps part of Kenyon life. We cannot cent Guggenheim Fellowship win- Admissions for the academic year The Executive Committee has to correct misconceptions that ex- 1964-196- ner. A two year leave of absence 5. He was previously a recommended to the Trustees that ist in other countries help sensing how inadequate any about the for Professor Raymond English, teacher and guidance counselor in at least $10,000 of the unrestricted American mid-contine- nt and its verbal tribute must be, but there who will become director of the secondary school. $25,000 McGregor Fund grant be cultural climate," said Mr. will be a lasting to tribute him social science program of the Tutchings is a 1961 Kenyon used for cost of and Michael. consultants in the memories that Skip Falk- Educational Research Council of graduate. He was president of the for architectural studips and

The project will be financed vice-preside- nt enstine has left at Kenyon. Cleveland, will be accepted. student body and plans for a new co-ordin- ate col- from a fund drive and, hopefully, Wesley P. Tutchings will be of Beta Theta Pi. He majored in lege for women. Acceptance is foundation grants. Terry Murbach appointed Assistant Director of history. assured.

. , sf"r-rtis- j nt-- v:

"Our Freshman year's a mem'ry, Gone too, our Sophomore, And soon our friends and comrades Will know us here no more:" The Class of 1964. S K C T I O IV THE ARTS SPORTS LECTURES JUNE 5, 1964 GAMBIER, OHIO PAGE FIVE

'STRANGELOVE' SHOCKS Kluge and Lentz Gel WITH BLACK COMEDY Superlative Rating by John Cocks by Richard Freeman It was to no profound That Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to one's Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb is surprise that the year's two most nofCTJ certainly the funniest and sis inspired lecturers should step di- most courageous American film in a decade you must already know; MWT. Li rectly out of our body. LJ that it consciously sets out to break a whole string of Johnson office student Least 111 "iLJW TrJ"m taboos and to taunt and prod a hundred sacred cows you mortified of all were Messrs.

probably : P. Frederick Kluge and Perry already realize. A lot has been written about the film, some of it n Lentz, who per- outraged,-an- d rendered assured complimentary, some of it some just sour-face- d. ill formances in the last inning of Although even the strongest casionally seems ready to crack, this year's honors lectures, con- dissenters will grant that Kubrick Like all great satire, Dr. Strange-deserv- es ducted May 6-- 7 in Philomathe-sia- n some credit for making love is ultimately anarchistic, it Hall. such an outrageous black comedy, takes no sides so it may success-man- y Our superlative should feel that the subject of the fully destroy all sides, rating put the reader in mind of the film which is merely the end In characterization and actual lack-lust- re Russell Kirk and the of the world is just not a cause physical presentation, (Dr. gratuitously sententious James for laughing, that Kubrick and Strangelove is a film of deep Bellows as two examples of the his co-auth- ors (Terry Southern blacks and insane whites: open-an- d The Archives Room in the Chalmers Memorial Library. year's disastrous lecture program. Peter George) have stacked ing shots of a dazzlingly bright With poise and capable direction, the cards against a certain politi- - snow field in Alaska and a pain-c- al Kluge and Lentz dispelled all sus- faction, and that finally their fully neoned computer room are HATTENDORF DISCUSSES picions of youth and inexperience film isn't very funny anyway. I'm soon replaced by the smokey and placed themselves head and not quite sure what film these blackness of General Ripper's of-peo- ple COLLEGE ARCHIVES ' shoulders above the aforemen- may have seen, but it cer- - fice and the forbidding shadows tioned imported talent. by Tom Carr tainly wasn't Dr. Strangelove, and of the War Room. Kubrick keeps MR. KLUGE LED OFF the pro- if they should remember a title his camera at a distance, holding John Hattendorf, College Archivest and history major, enter- gram with an incisive crystalliza- much like that then they cer- - the same long shot sometimes for tained the Collegian recently with remarks about his job and quirks tion of his honors thesis, entitled tainly must not have watched the minutes on end, as if he doesn't of Kenyon lore. Hattendorf, whose voluntary position as College "The Time of Their Lives" a rest of the film very closely. Too quite believe the madness of it all Archivist ends when he graduates Sunday, felt "that college history study of Edmund Wilson and bad, because underneath its (recall now the scene of is nothing very profound; I'm surprised you wish to speak to me." first John Dos Passos. Marked by the hilariously bizarre almost sur- Ripper on the telephone); then, He recounts his beginnings in felicity of language which Mr. realistic exterior there lies a vi- when we have been exposed for the archives very frankly, re- Kluge has applied to his journal- sion as sober and black as any a while to all this hysteria and membering that he had simply istic endeavors, the discussion re- put on film. have accepted it because there is offered to help move the rare ever vealed the real Kluge not the THERE IS AS LITTLE rea- no alternative, he cuts quickly in books, art collections, and folios rabid polemicist of common sup- of a son, all, the conser- - to a tight close-u- p, forcing us during the book move year first of for position, but the less public and Dr. Strangelove full up against and a half ago, and at the end vatives to call this thermonuclear more skillful scholar. V "unfair" as for the liberals to use Wonderland which stands just a was asked by Librarian Edward J Announcing his intention of point. General half-ste- p from reality. Heintz to "sort of straightened up it as a rallying justifying the writers' respective, Hay- - THE HORROR tales of the archives room." He has been Jack D. Ripper (Sterling LIKE baffling retreats, Mr. Kluge the bomber Shirley Jackson, everything in doing it ever since. He was famil- den), who launches launched on a trenchant exami- so Dr. Strangelove is just a little iar with the history of the College attack against Russia "the nation of Wilson's critcism and Commies" will no longer be able ' unusual, just enough to make us and his first task was to begin to Dos Passos' fiction. With thorough order and catalogue the letters, "to sap and impurify our precious uncomfortable. Kubrick and going insight, he sympathetically bodily fluids" through flpurida- - Southern have carefully con- - mementos, and files collected in exposed Wilson's critical incon- library. tion, is most certainly a wild and trolled their timing and built up the sistencies and placed the critic as "THE ARCHIVES collection merciless parody of a right-win- g their absurd characters and situ- - a force in American literature. non-existe- nt as ations a piece at a time so that was practically when extremist, just as certainly The body of the dissertation, film ends with the I began," he relates, "and I've President Merkin Muff ley (Peter when the was concerned with LAID though, been through all college attics, Sellers) is an accurate, acid por- fantastic, awful mock resurrec- Kluge's searching analysis of John to the Manistee Michigan His- trait of a weak, bumbling liberal tion of Dr. Strangelove from the John Hattendorf Dos Passos his development torical Society, and all over find- who almost libelously resembles wheelchair, we seem not to be and fictional technique. Critics ing stuff. On top of a cabinet in quiring about the Gorbel Family, Adlai Stevenson. Most of the looking at fantasy any more but who have dismissed the curious the maintainance department I to those for data to be used in film's other characters fall some- - the reductio ad absurdum of the devices and shallow characteri- found the original plans for Bex-le- y books on Chase, David Bates where these two points, most uncomfortable of realities. between zation of all Dos Possos' fiction Hall; from the Yale Univer- Douglass, Bishop Mcllvaine, and Turgidson (George This whole approach is well il- General Buck Mr. Kluge refuted, pointing out sity Library I secured copies of other Kenyon personages. The C. a complete fool who is lustrated by the under-the-cre-di- ts Scott), that Dos Passos intended to por- forty letters from Bishop Philan- request on Douglass, third college foreign, scene of the two bombers re- suspicious of all things tray the condition of life rather der Chase." president and designer of the his sus fueling in mid-ai- r: we've all seen is nonetheless correct in than to develop lengthily the His job soon branched out into college Park, was singular "all - this before, as the old joke runs, picions of the Russian ambassa- complexities of individual human answering requests for facts about the derogatory information you takes but this time we're looking at it dor, who up to the very last conflicts. Of the writer himself, Kenyon history some two can send." Last Spring work be- from a different angle. We know useless of the War Room ng pictures who since the thirties has under- hundred so far in all, ranging gan on the collecting of a tape-recordi- the situation is absurd and with a Minox spy camera; Group that gone a radical ideological face- from those addressed to "The section in which the Captain we laugh at that absurdity, but Lionel Mandrake (Peter lifting, Mr. Kluge concluded; Gambier Historical Society, Gam-bi- er words of guest speakers could be a sub- onlv because the music on the Sellers again, this time in Cont. on page 6, Col. 3 College, Gambier, Ohio" in- - preserved; this has been imple- is the mocking "Try tle burlesque of Alec Guiness), soundtrack mented on such occasions as Rob- Tenderness"; there is al- as a neutral foreigner, is indeed a Little ert Frost's library dedication the surface a the film's soul hub of moral and ways just below speech (one of his last public page 6, Col. 1 political sanity, but even he oc- - Cont. on Dramatic Club Announces appearances), many of the Gund lectures, and the Kenyon Re- V Season's Programme view Symposium. Next HATTENDORF'S PRIVATE The Visit, Macbeth, and Rhino- It is fitting that in the year of tasks developed into an indexing f ceros will be presented by the the quadricentennial celebration of the Mcllvaine letters and the ii Dramatic Club next year. of Shakespeare's brith one of his preparation of "an introductory" plays should be presented on the The Swiss playwright Friedrick pictorial college history which stage. The Dramatic RE- Duerrenmatt wrote The Visit in Kenyon is included in this year's Club's selection of Macbeth prom- VEILLE. In John "sought order to dramatize the despair, the it has ises a challenge for next winter's to portray an interest Ken-yon- 's guilt, and the materialism of the in past of pre- -- actors. and an idea its y 1 t-- m r- modern world. It tells of a hard- it sent spirit." ened old women, Claire Zachanas-sia- n The third production is Eugene He assesses the worth and pur- who returns to her native Ionesco's Rhinoceros, the expres- pose of the archives succintly: village, 'Guellen, as lavishly weal- play that caused so much sionists "they provide a central location thy as the town is poor. Because enthusiasm and controversy in where information on all matters of their failing industries the peo- New York and abroad. Ionesco's -- - US concerning college history can be . 1 rw . , a ple of Guellen are living in a des- concern with contemporary issues to found." But he goes on to com- pair from which there seems be is manifest in this representation ment, "The space available at no escape until Mme. Zachanas-sia- n of the condition humaine. salva- present is totally inadequate. The (with view-finde- r) offers them financial A thermonuclear wonderland: Stanley Kubrick to be a varied and faculty in general has consistent-Con- t. Hay den tion in return for the murder of It promises lines up a shot for Dr. Strangelove with Sterling on page 8, Col. 1 former lover. polemical season (left) and Peter Sellers. her JUNE 5, 1964 PAGE SIX

parts of the film. 'SKIP': FRIEND . . . A friend pointed out afterwards REVEILLE 64 is novel, heartwarming that what little laughter there Cont. from page 1, Col. 3 by David Mouat was during Strangelove's resur- undergrad- signs of fatigue, of waning power. was pretty sure to be the spokes- rection seemed nervous and a bit After much fanfare, Dr. Falkenstine didn't attend as man for most of the crowd. Some- hysterical, and this finally is the uates were finally presented with many faculty meetings as he times you could tell by his ami- key to the whole film. Dr. the combined reveille 64 A would have liked to, his job kept able grin that an "innocent" stra- Strangelove has been described as Dusty Path. Expecting much, we him on the field or in the gym, tagem hadn't worked and that he a "nightmare comedy," but more were both pleased with the new but he was as vigorous a scrapper knew how to retire, graciously. accurately it is a film about a approach and sorry to see that it in Ascension and Ransom Halls Nobody who knew him will waking, omnipresent nightmare. was not more unified in the whole as he was down below the Hill. forget him. Each of us will have Like all dreams, and especially all book. The man his colleagues and stu- his' own picture, of course. Mine bad dreams, its substance seems Junior editor John Schofield, dents will not forget was an out- includes his membership in the upon first hearing to be a little aware of a "lack of direction" standing member of his profes- fraternity which held its brief silly, even funny; but there is a in former yearbooks, has created sion. At home, recognition had meetings every morning except definite and unnerving danger a philosophy of non-senation- al, come in his being named to the Sunday near the front of Jim lurking there, a violence which photographic presentation design- Darlington Greene chair and in Hayes' grocery store, those of us may both frighten and instruct if ed, in his words, to capture the his recent promotion to the rank who have to ingest our daily ra- we stop long enough to examine spirit of the College. Certain fea- of full professor. tion of newsprint even before our it closely. tures of reveille 64 have embod- We need not detail the difficul- breakfast. It was a town and THIS, I THINK, IS Why Ku- ied this thought with considerable ties a director of athletics must gown situation in miniature, brick chose to make a comedy. success. The photography of Peter deal with in a small college such marked by the greatest good We must realize this waking Jessup and Bill Dye often suc- as ours. Only a few days ago, we spirits, loud protests against Jim's nightmare and cope with it, not ceeds in capturing the alternately were congratulating him for the incessant demands that we do ignore it; and we must laugh posed and slouched character of fine group of athletes we had this something about his latest in- first to lead us on to deeper the student body. The photograph- year and are to have next fall. dignation, mock anger and flat- things, and to keep us from es- A Dusty Path ic presentation of the advertise- Our tradition is not an easy one tering insults men being boys caping back again to sleep. ments is both novel and heart- for coaches to live with. They are for a few minutes before facing warming, if that can be called a not only inevitably committed to the daily routine. compliment for a yearbook. How- winning, must do it before is but Men are what they are no mat- ever, the sports copy redund- of people. In spite of MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPT organ- hundreds ter where they are. I hope it will ant and hackneyed, the they as as this, believe firmly not seem inappropriate if I end izational photography too posed. anybody else in keeping the pro- this all too feeble tribute by re- LEAVES ON EXHIBIT This would not be so bad were per balance between athletics and turning to the bowling alley, for it not so much out of line with academic work. Fifty manuscript leaves, select- from books written in various it is there that many of us spent the Schofield approach. A who went out for a ed to illustrate the art of the European scriptoria by Benedic- student the most time with him. If the It is not difficult to see the to able manuscript during the period of tine, Franciscan, Carthusian, Do- team Skip coached had be phrase "body English" had not merits of the pictorial approach in- and other orders of to take advice from a man who its greatest development and minican, py already been in our language, we over the standard pose-and-co- I doubt fluence, are now on display in the monks. Many are enriched with didn't mince words, but would have had to invent a format. None of us wishes to see any failed to recognize what Robert Bovven Brown Gallery of handsome borders, initials letters, that phrase to describe the way he reveille identical to thousands of a basically considerate and gen- Chalmers Memorial Library. and line-endin- gs rendered in seemed to control the ball long the other yearbooks across the man he was. He had one of leaves were accumulated color, and twenty-fiv- e are illumi- tle after it had left his fingers. His The country. Editor Schofield must be most expressive I have a period of forty years by nated with burnished gold or the faces delivery was effective but highly over credited with instituting a valua- ever seen. Were there any deeper Otto F. Ege, Dean of the silver. The texts include the unorthodox, wtih a little leap the late ble approach, one which incorp- scowls his, soon followed by of and Bible, various church services than leaving him suspended for a brief Cleveland Institute Art orates items of permanence along th broadest of smiles? When dis- on History of the Book books, the writings of the church, moment, a skip which could ac- Lecturer with the trivia every yearbook gust seemed appropriate, did ever of Library Science, fathers, and some of the classics. count for his nickname. He usu- at the School must present. We hope it will be a lip curl more significantly.? The University. They CHANGES IN BOOK hands ally knew what his score would Western Reserve continued and expanded in subs- typographer's art cannot friends of the from the revised carolingian to render be before the ball reached the were donated by equent years. the tone of voice in which he College. the angular and round gothic, the pins, but once and a while he The pictorial history A Dusty would say: "You can't do that!" has been made batarde, and humanistic style of would turn dejectedly from what The selection presents the efforts of Co- I have never asked game officials writing are illustrated. Tools, ma- Path turned out to be a strike. llege Archivist John Hattendorf what they thought of him, but terials, and their use and pre- '64 with design by the reveille who can doubt that they respect- He did his job well, he played Lecture . . . paration are described, and some staff. Their purpose was avowedly ed him. He knew the book and hard but graciously, he was a Cont. from page 5., Col. 3 methods of dating and allocating friend. May as be modest: "What we present here is was never averse to quoting from warm much "Dos Passos today is nothing the provenance of the book from said of any of us some day. neither a scholarly nor a complete it in a clear voice, but if he re- a old man", which the leaf was taken are more than battered study of the College's one hundred turned to the bench muttering, he Edward Harvey closed with a pessimistic pointed out on the label attach- and and forty years. We have collect- observation: "Thus, with the fa- ed to each of the leaves. ed some fragments from Kenyon's tuous a contented ex-novel- ist . . . address of history; we have closed them for COCKS ON 'STRANGELOVE' to a broken critic-in-exil- e, their historical and pictorial quali- Cont. from page 5, Col. 2 another cycle in American A.F.KO.T.C. ty and interest ... It is our hope I Literature reaches it farcical hard core of reality and even the that saw once in a television that this little book may entertain most documentary dis- close." absurd situations are deeply about refuse Honors Cadets the reader, encourage interest in in it. This is why, finally posal United States, MR. LENTZ'S HONORS project Kenyon's detachment of the rooted in the where, the history of the institution, and and at its deepest Dr. during gar- has been the composition of a Air Force Reserve Officer's level, shots of odoriferous at least partially capture the spirit Strangelove is not funny at all. bage heaps throughout the coun- novel based on the massacre at Training Corps honored 14 cadets of Kenyon College." This may be why, too, some try, the Fort Pillow, Arkansas, a hitherto at an awards day program held soundtrack blared The materials exhibited are i- things in the film misfire. "America the Beautiful." obscure incident of the Civil War. on May 15, an annual event de- nnately interesting, especially to The funniest scenes (Buck Tur- - THESE, REALLY, ARE minor Proclaiming himself, by dint of signed to recognize and stimulate those of us who want to see what gidson briefing the president in faults: Dr. Strangelove is still the his copious research into the sub- superior achievement. Philander really looked like. The the War Room, the bomber pilot most daring and successful ject, "the greatest living expert on The program included a formal work has all the appeal of a fami- determined to get "the Ruskies" American film in a very long the Ft. Pillow massacre; in fact, inspection and pass-in-reve- w with ly album. Whether it imparts that at all cost) are those which skirt time. But you may well still ask the only living expert on the Ft. Col. William F. Grubb, chairman mystical sense of Kenyon is much reality, plunging us in and taking is this all a cause for laughter, Pillow massacre", novelist Lentz of the department of air science, a matter of personal opinion. For us out again without a chance for poking fun? William Buckley recounted the detailed research as the reviewing officer. the alumni we're sure its quite a to get our bearings. The few for one doesn't think so, and I that went into the novel, the main Cadets who received awards conversation piece. scenes of slapstick (a completely personally know of at least two-hyperbo- lic purpose of which is to derive are: and absurd form), like dozen others who agree with him, from a specific incident a more Randy Livingston, Professor of Turgidson tripping over his own although Buckley, to be perfectly general truth about the Civil War Air Science Achievement Medal- Other comments: the feet or Bat Guano getting a fair, wrote that he as yet had not and the resultant North-Sout- h re- lion, and Past Cadet Commander This year's reveille reflects Coca-Co- imagination, stream of la syrup in the seen the film; for the others there lationship. Mr. Lentz feels that Award; David Hackworth, Chi- discriminating taste, of tf! face, fail because they are out of is just no excuse. Dr. Strange-ke- y the majority of Civil War novels cago Tribune ROTC Gold Medal, and considerable hard work with the film as a whole and love is very funny at one level, have not succeeded in communi- and Past Cadet Commander editor John Schofield. Even the because they demand for them- - horribly funny, but it demands cating several vital truths about Award; Chris Scott, Reserve Of- advertising is attractive! And the selves a complete suspension of much closer examination than the conflict and its ultimate sig- ficers Associations Certificate; Al- supplement A Dusty Path (su-

A-wa- Ha- disbelief, disbelief that the film that. No one can see that last nificance. an Bourne, Air Force Times rd, bstantially the work of John an cannot afford to lose even for the scene with Dr. Strangelove ad-brief- est FURTHERMORE, THE author Mount Vernon Chamber of ttendorf and Bill Dye) will be time. In this way, too, vancing from the shadows, the seeks a durable reportage of the Commerce Award; John Tucker, inspiration for many years. the mockery and sarcasm of the right hand with the ominous black incident itself, a carnage that oc- Chicago Tribune Gold Medal; President Lund bomb sequence which ends the capeskin glove clutching at his curred when confederate troops, Gerry Reynolds, General Dyna- .4 Du.s-f-y Path is a thoroughly film seems a bit hollow, after the throat, and sit back and have a after an extended siege, captured mics AFROTC Cadet Award; Bob professional piece of work care- ultimate horror of Strangelove, hearty laugh. This is the bitterest Ft. Pillow from its Union defend- Gledhill, Arnold Air Society fully planned and beautifully ex- this all has the effect of being reality of all: when Strangelove ers and pitilessly murdered the Bronze Rifle Medal; Maurice ecuted. I am confident that most just a bit too easy, too pat and arises from his wheelchair and survivors. Though many of us Rothrock, Reserve Officers Asso- alumni will want a copy, but it offhand. finds he can walk again, his heal-We'- i! could not muster sympathy for ciation Silver Medal; Jim Kropa, should appeal also to anyone in- meet again, er was no Biblical messiah of Mr. Lenlz's views on matters tra- Chicago Tribune ROTC Silver terested in a particular aspect of Don't know where, don't know peace, but rather the clarion of versing the Mason-Dixo- n line, we Medal; Mike Smith, Sons of the this nation's social and cultural when, destruction and doom, of nuclear were captivated by the Alaba- American Revolution Award; history in the nineteenth and But I know we'll meet again holocaust peace is what crip- - man's charming, affective presen- Dave Monger, Robert Bowen twentieth centuries. some sunny day pled Strangelove, and it is death tation, and his illuminating dis- Brown, Jr., Memorial Medal; Tom Kenyon is only one college, but This is fairly amusing but i'm a- - that makes him well, course on the making of a novel. Curtis, Jr., Arnold Air Society in effect A Dusty Path tells the fraid rather anti-climac- tic and There was no laughter during Mr. Kluge and Mr. Levtz mill Silver Rifle Medal; Jim Baxter, story of many such institutions. even a bit sophomoric, the kind of this scene, at least not the kind of graduate Willi Highest. Honors in Chicago Tribune ROTC Silver George Lanning bumptious social-prote- st satire laughter that had greeted other Englisli. Medal. Editor, Alumni Bulletin JUNE 5, ,1964 THE KENYON COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN INDIANAPOLIS 500 RACE MARRED BY DEATHS SPRING SPORTS REVIEW by Lee Bowman With the last game at Capital rained out, Kenyon's baseball Coach Don White's track team The forty-eigh- th running of the Indianapolis 500 team 15-- 5 mile race finished a 1-- was with record, good for fifth place in the Ohio finished with a 10 record. The indelibly marred by the tragic, flaming death of veteran Eddie Conference standings. Junior Ken Klug led the team in hitting with squad scored 3'A points in the Sachs and rookie Dave MacDonald. When lihe a 11:00 a.m. starting .389 average, fifth best in the league. Klug was selected Most Valu- Ohio Conference Championships, time arrived for the Memorial Day classic, Scotsman Jim Clark held able Player and also captain for next year. good for 14th place. Points were the pole position and a favored place in the minds of many 6-- fans Tennis compiled a 7 mark. At the Conference championships, scored by the 880 relay team and at Raceway But as got Park. the rare under way with 22-2- the tradi- held at Obcrlin May 3, freshman Bill Konrad won the third by freshman high jumper Bob tional pace lap, Indy regulars hoped for has what been conceded singles tournament. The team finished fifth overall. Most Valuable Patrick. Most Valuable Team to be the last likely victory of the front-engin- ed Offenhauser road- Player was junior Dave Thomas; he was Member was Bob Bales '65; Bales sters. also elected captain for next year. and John Schweppe '66 were se- As the thirty-thre- e entries lected co-capta- ins for the 1965 dashed for the first turn, however, outdoor season. it was the green, rear-engin- ed Winning a triangular match Lotus-For- d piloted by the versa- CARNIVAL with Mt. Union and Ohio Wes-leya- n, tile Clark which charged into the OFFERS DIVERSIONS the golf team finished with lead. Close in his wake were f - a 14-- 4 record, and tied for fourth Bobby Marshman, Grand Prix J at the Ohio Conference Cham- star Dan Gurney, both in Lo- vv;v pionships at Hiram. Most Valuable tuses, and Roger Ward aboard a 1 Player was Perry Hudson '66; third Ford-power- ed special. Fur- junior Bob Legg was elected next back ther were last year's win- year's captain. ner Parnelli Jones and A. J. Foyt .- -J 8-4- -1, e Lacrosse finished losing in conventional Offies, sports car-notabl- to conference champion Deni-so- n Walt Hansgen in a rear-mount- ed 13-- 3. Kenyon Offy, and an assortment finished third in the final league standings. In- of veterans and rookies in Offies, Ford-power- dividual honors were gained by ed machines and the senior Tom Bond, selected to play unforgettable, whining Novis. on the South team in the 1964 BUT AS THE LEADERS re-enter- ed All-Ameri- ca game at C. W. Post the pit straight on sec- their College, Long Island, on June 6. ond 2'2-mi- le tour of the oval Coach Bill Hess will be on the newcomer MacDonald, who had coaching staff for the South team. worked his way up to about fifth Attackmen Bill Hylton '64 and position from his starting place Jeff Ellis '67 were one-tw- o in in the ranks, spun and headed for Conference scoring. the inside retaining wall. Imme- All things considered, spring diately his Mickey Thompson Spe- sports compiled one of the best cial burst into flames as the fifty , , overall records in recent years. gallons of es- Av1 aviation gasoline The highlight of the season was caped from his ruptured tanks. the lacrosse team's 11-- 9 double Then, seeming to be little more ' at " overtime victory over Denison a ball . - than of towering flame and McBride Field. The other teams smoke, the car bounced off the acquited themselves in equally wall and continued down the fine fashion. The baseball squad's straight with the obscured lines 15-- 5 record marks one of their of speeding traffic. Before anyone most successful seasons, and the could even I i- - ' establish what had l.,v 4j linksmen turned in their usually happened, Sachs, driving in excess fine performances. The track of one hundred miles per hour team, hampered by a severe lack and unable to see through the of depth, still registered several cloud of burning fibreglass, Students broke the exam week routine and townies in- outstanding individual perfor- charged into MacDonald, hitting vaded Gambier to enjoy the first annual Fireman's Fair, mances. Bob Bales' consistent vic- him head-o- n. May 27-3- 0. Staged by the College Township Volunteer Fire tories in the 880 and Steve Wallis' The shock of the collision burst Department lo raise money to purchase fire equipment, performance in the shotput were the remaining fuel tanks aboard the Fair was termed "successful" by local Marshal Chuck the most outstanding. The tennis the two crippled cars and greatly Imel. Fireworks Friday evening and a parade and drill team broke even, almost. intensified the already fierce , Memorial Day climaxed the four-da- y spectacle. blaze. Meanwhile Ronnie Dunman ? ! m - arrived with his roadster and RUSSELL APPOINTED spun into the wall in an attempt 1 to avoid the inferno which en- NEW SWIMMING COACH compassed the entire width of the straightaway. He was able to The appointment of Richard W. jump clear of his car and over Russell as coach of the Lord the wall to safety, but his car was swimming team has been an- soon gutted by fire. Others safely nounced. He will begin coaching negotiated the obstruction, but at Kenyon in September. seven cars Were disabled by their Russell replaces Dean Ed- encounter with the accident. wards, who resigned as swimming MEANWHILE FIRE-FIGHTER- S coach after 11 years and 11 Ohio arrived to try to control the Conference swimming champ-pionship- s. fire. Their first attempts with Edwards stepped down small chemical extinguishers IT" in order to devote full time to . .4 i were futile and it seemed a mer- f i f J his duties as Dean of Students at ciless interval until the heavy Kenyon. equipment arrived. Sachs and Previously swimming coach at ' MacDonald were both unconscious Sr 1 Upper Arlington High School in ' ' and no effective attempt was : n ' f Columbus, Russell is a 1954 grad- made to extricate either man un- uate of Ohio State University, til the fire had subsided. Min- where he is now studying for his utes after his crash MacDonald Master's degree. At Upper Arling- was rushed to the track hospital, ton, his teams have compiled a but Sachs was left in his charred record of 85 wins and 18 losses. racer, dignified only by the cover- For the past five years his swim- ing, of a lifeless white sheet. j mers have finished in the top five After an hour and three quar- at the state championships. ters the track crew had cleared .1 In addition to his swimming du- the wreckage from the track and ties, Russell also coached football the race started once again. The and track at the junior high singl- - P.M. race officials decided on a BUFFET 6:30 9:00 HAYES GROCERY school. With four unbeaten teams e-file starting lineup based on in eight years, his gridders have Saturday Night-Reservation- s two 41-- 8. the positions after the first Requested amassed a record of In track laps. Clark was once again at the his teams have a win-los- e record In 40-- head of the pack where he re- Gambier of 5. COCKTAIL LOUNGE 5-- 10 mained for about ten laps. Chal- A member of the Executive lenging his lead was the rapid Board of the Ohio High School Marshman in a similar Lotus, ALCOVE BEER - SNACKS - WINE Atheletic Association, Russell with Gurney left to protect the THE lives in Columbus with wife Vernon, Ohio his third spot from the assault of the Mount and two year old son. Cont. on page 8, Col. 4 JUNE fj, 1964 PAGE EIGHT THE KENYON COLLEGIAN

mixture being put into the car. 500 RACE . . . HATTENDORF . . . The entire pit seemed to erupt in flame and Jones was lucky to page 5, Col. 5 Cont from page 7, Col. 1 Cont. from escape with minor burns. By this ly been lax about providing cop- charging Offies. Ward soon pass- time the announcer had announc- ies of their many articles and ed the flying Californian to as- ed MacDonald's death, and a sec- talks so that a permanent record sume third place, and Jones and ond hush spread through the sad- of them can be made available." Foyt battled each oher for fifth. dened crowd. IN HIS WORK John has come Before long, Marshman took over By now, Gurney was experienc- across some interesting items. the lead and pushed to widen his ing tire trouble and a quick con- Among the papers of Professor advantage over the diminutive sultation with the Dunlop repre- Coffin was found a Babylonian Clark. sentative and Lotus builder Colin clay tablet, the last in an otherwise-- Marshman's luck was not to Chapman lead to the retirement complete series of tablets hold, and his rear axle was the of his car. Ward was in and out from 1900 b.c. In an envelope first thing to weaken under the of the pits a number of times and stamped "Department of English," tremendous strain of laps faster also bothered by Hansgen's re- at first thrown out, was a letter than 150 miles per hour. After peated visits to his pit. bearing the signature of Queen leading for about eight laps, he With the retirement of Jones, Elizabeth I. at. was seen walking slowly toward Foyt took the lead at about the Three events came readily to the pits, his afternoon as a spec- 250 mile mark and was challeng- his- 1 his mind as prominent in the tator looming ahead. ed only by Ward, who briefly held tory of the College. He recalled WITH MARSHMAN'S DEMISE the lead while he was in the pits that Philander Chase, "was Clark assumed the lead. He im- for fuel late in the race. thrown out of Kenyon .by the. mediately set about increasing WHEN THE RACE finally end- Clergy of Ohio in 1831 for being his margin over Ward, but soon ed, there were only fourteen of a tyrant ... he felt he ran a blew his left rear tire at 140 mph: the original thirty-thre- e entries patriarchal system and was him- directly in front of the pits. Clark circulating on the dreary oval, self the patriarch, whose way was did a masterful job of controlling and Foyt was the winner through law." the three-wheele- d vehicle and default and his own stamina. If John admonished the George brought it to rest in the infield the race proved anything to the S. Rider Company to take notes by the first turn. Meanwhile, three hundred thousand specta- as he recounted that Peirce Hall Ward had had to stop at his pit tors who saw or heard it from a was built without horizontal roof and Jones had moved up into sec- blanket in the infield, it proved supports. "Everything was fine ond place. This left him the lead the lingering superiority of the until midway through World A len unil aparimenl house development will be built this sum- at Clark's retirement. He, too, Offy roadster, the immense need War II, when the walls began to mer on a triangle of land across Route 229 northwest of Peirce Hall. had to make a scheduled stop for for improved driver safety at en- bow out. The roof was removed Construction will begin as soon as financing is completed. Designed fuel; however, a careless mem- closed oval tracks, and the spec- and the students were in air-condition- ed, with young faculty in mind, the apartments will have individual ber of his crew c'aused a tacle which only modern motor often sopping-w- et cir- terraces looking into a grove of trees, will be staggered for additional spark which ignited the alcohol racing provides. cumstances until supports were privacy, fireproof and accoustically separate. The College has taken placed in." options on six of the ten units. Two lo four bedroom units are avail- ASKING FOR A few more able, all with a third floor study loft. They were designed by local comments, we heard, "I got a architect Jim Morgan and will be the second major community de- STUDY SUMMER out of my job once was THIS trip that velopment, after the BUCK project, scheduled for Gambier in the In The Notion's Capital both good for my ego and bad near future. for my sense of the importance of Kenyon ... I represented the school at the American Library " Association Institute on Western MAZZA'S RESTAURANT INC. Americana in Chicago, July 1963, and was the only student archi- And NEW Cocktail Lounge UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE PROGRAMS 140 vist among college people FULLY ACCREDITED present. But it didn't matter that Special Courses in Government. Politics. International Relations and other Social Sciences. Kenyon wasn't represented by a TWO 5-WE- EK DAY SESSIONS Won. June 22nd - Fri. July 24th professional scholar no one - Aug. ... 214 West High St. Phone 393-207- 6 Mon. Julv 27th Fri. 28th 8-WE- there was particularly interested ONE EK EVE. SESSION OPERATED BY MAZZA BROTHERS Mon. June 22nd Fri. Aug. Hth

Air-Condition- in Kenyon." ed Classrooms and Dormitories Director of Admissions He concluded, For Additional "The archives The American University Information and Mass. and Nebr. Aves.. N.W. keep things in perspective while Bulletin, Write: Washington. 0. C. 20016 it becomes clear that Gordon essSiiiL Keith Chalmers was certainly not the Great God Brown who could ' do no wrong, it also becomes THE clear that he was an excellent educator put KENYON COLLEGE and the name of Sales and Kenyon on the map. I think this THE GAMBIER is the sense of perspective that SHOP a Management Trainee greater awareness of Kenyon's The lowest prices in Gambier . . . past can interject into the actions COOK BOOK The largest selection 6f pipes in Knox County . . and problems of Kenyon's pres- Cincinnati manufacturing com- in Ohio The finest Kenyon sweatshirts 75-ye- ent." pany with a solid ar his- Stop by to see us this week end. tory and a bright future re- To continue that awareness, quires 2 salesminded men, Mr. Heintz has announced: "Mrs. 22-2- 8, to train for sales and Priscilla Sutcliffe has been ap- sales management functions in pointed College Archivist to carry Where Kenyon men are always welcome our executive training pro- on the work with Kenyoniana so gram. Good starting salary. If ably assumed by John Hatten-do- rf for breakfast, snacks, or dinner. your aptitude is in sales and in the fall of 1962. I am not sales management and you are 4gl alone in expressing for the Col- looking for opportunity, send lege a deep sense of. appreciation your resume of education, per- lljllll for Hattendorfls increasing the THE VILLAGE INN sonal and business background entire community's awareness of to: the interest and value of our ex- Pipes Imported Candies Tobaccos tensive collection of books, pa- Available at the Bookstore or SALES pers, photographs and artifacts V.P. from The Gambier Cook Book relaxing to postpaid the history of the P.O. Box 58, Cincinnati 1, Ohio Gambier, Ohio, $3.50 College."

The People's Bank The Kenyon College Bookshop Member of Federal Deposit Need a train, plane, or boat FOOD BEER CANDY MKT. Insurance Corp. is open tomorrow morning, 9 connection or reservation? ZINK'S FRUIT to 12, to commence FANCY FRUITS AND Gambier, Ohio. permit Heading home or south to DOROTHY'S LUNCH VEGETABLES ment visitors the opportunity Florida or west to Aspen? Party Supplies of browsing in our well IN GAMBIER Good Cheese Too! Soaps and Bleaches stocked stack. MOUNT VERNON 309 South Main Si. TRAVEL SERVICE BEST FRESH FRUIT East Gambier Street The Kenyon THE KENYON COLLEGIAN

NON-PROFI- KOKOSING Will help you going GAMBIER, OHIO T 08G College Bookshop and coming. U. S. POSTAGE MARKET PAID 8:00 to 6:00 DAILY GAMBIER, OHIO PERMIT No. J Close Wednesday Noon Return KeqiR'sU'd