Kenyon Collegian College Archives

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Kenyon Collegian College Archives Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange The Kenyon Collegian College Archives 2-22-1968 Kenyon Collegian - February 22, 1968 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - February 22, 1968" (1968). The Kenyon Collegian. 2268. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/2268 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]. BASKETBALL PROFESSORS CONTINUES ON DRUGS WINNING WAYS See Page Three eniptt See Page Four Vol. XCIV Kenyon College, Gambier,WWOhio, February 22, 1968 No. 17 Lord Debaters Score Well Trustees Pass f V-- In 2nd Tourney Hike in Tuition The debate society hosted the Most significant result of Ken-yon- 's by trustees were William E. Mc-Cullo- h, second annual Kenyon Invitat- trustee meeting in Cleve- Carl Brehm, and James t was a tuition Harrold, New associate professors ional Debate Tournament amidst t land this weekend hike of $240. are Ronald McLaren and Thomas other Winter Weekend activities I Friday and Saturday. i Tuition will be raised from its Jegla, and assistant professors are Eleven colleges from four states current level at $880 per semester Donald Boyd and Philip Church-Micha- el participated in the six round 'J ($1760 the year) to $2,000. Room Mott was named lecturer. tournament. Ohio Northern, and board fees were left un- Wooster, Bowling Green and one changed. ' of three Kenyon teams finished The motion was passed with re- Kenyon Holds 5-- Bill Taggart according to in a tie for first with 1 records. luctance, President On the basis of five speakers FREHMEN AND SENATORS meeting in ihe Gund Lounge to discuss F. Edward Lund. However, he points, Ohio Northern placed first, issues of vital concern lo the frosh. pointed out comparisons of Ken- Woodie Line; Wooster second and Kenyon third. yon with other front-ran- k col- Because Kenyon was ineligible leges in the east and midwest for team trophies, Bowling Green show the new cost to be about Takes Seven Frosh Attack Varied average. received the third place award. The Woodrow Wilson National Administrators have expected The Kenyon team of Richard Fellowship Foundation announced the major to Baehr and Robert Berger com- tuition raise come Monday Kenyon College has had 10-ye- ar 5-- In this year since a economic piled 1 With Solons the record to lead Ken- Meeting seven seniors selected as Wood-ro- w yon. Two Kenyon forecast was prepared two years other debaters, by Chuck Kenrick ed themselves either inexperi- Wilson 'Designates. Jeff Butz and Kim Byham, fin- ago by Hans Jenny of Wooster enced or disinterested with the Being designated as "among the ished in a tie for fifth in con- In a discussion with the Cam- College. Lund pointed out, how- job. He noted, however, that best future college teacher pro- sideration for speaker's trophies. pus Senate in the Gund Hall ever, that the hike voted was less such a move would impose a spects on the continent" are Brian Both had 139 points, with lounge Monday evening, freshmen than that predicted by Jenny. Baehr greater advising load on other D. Abner, James L. Gillespie, at 137 and Berger 135. registered complaints ranging Other financial changes voted more concerned faculty members. Gerald H. Goldschmidt, Mark S. Going into the last round, these from the faculty adviser system by trustees include a $40,000 in- It was suggested that a certain Greenberg, Jeffrey J. Henderson, four debaters were among the top to poor communcation of campus crease in scholarships and a 10 SOLONS, Page 6 Eric E. Linder, and Steven L. five, with Butz and Byham standi- organizations and government See per cent raise in the library bud- get. Willner. ng one-tw- o in speakers points, with the freshman class. In addition, Kenyon stu- but all four won only mediocre The adviser program came un- Sabbatical leaves and promo- three dents one more year points in the final tilt to finish in der attack first. Participants YAF tions were also verified. On sab- than last Promotes received honorable mention. a tie for fifth, seventh and eight. noted that quite a few advisers batical next year will be: Robert Hett-linge- r, They are Daniel H. Melcher, Carl The third Kenyon team of were either new to Gambier or Daniel, English; Richard F. F. Seastrum, and Timothy J. Terry Durica and Mark Straley completely disinterested and pas- Conservative religion; H. L. Warner, 2-- history; and Owen York, chem- Wildman. finished, with a 4 record. Butz sive in their role. Te Dean ac- 3-- istry. Anthony Bing Kenyon, 804 and Byham were 3. knowledged that inadequacies in of English with its students, ' Goals Kenyon one-ha- lf Next week, the Ohio state de- the program existed but argued at will spend a second year at the makes up less than of bate championship will be held at that it was people and not the by Stephen Christy American University of Beirut, one per cent (.38) of Ohio's full-tim- Capital University in Columbus. system ;in general was at and Wendell Lindstrom, math, e, on campus enrollment. that "Who is a yaffer?" the article Baehr and Ken Moore and Alan Batchelder, economics The Wilson Designates in the will debate fault. He said that efforts would in "The Moderateor," asks. negative Kenyon, will also be on leave. state. for and Byham be made next year to eliminate The Young Americans for to professor Ken-yon- and Butz will go prov- - Promoted full rank Oberlin with three times 's affirmative. all faculty advisers who had Freedom is a nationwide organi- enrollment, 2537, is the only zation of conservatives. A recent The Senate Drug Committee's Ohio institution to have more stu- analysis shows philoso- that their iirst report to ihe Kenyon com- dents honored. Ohio colleges to phical leanings down as fol- break munity was distributed public- have Woodrow Wilson Designates Boxed Up lows: Book ly yesterday. are: Oberlin (13), Kenyon (7), Radical Traditionalists (Brent In an effort lo shed light on Case-Weste- rn Reserve (4), Anti-oc- h Bozell) 8 ihe complicated problem of and Ohio State (3), Hiram, Traditionalists (Russell Kirk) Slated for Reveille drugs, ihe Collegian has solicit- Miami and Xavier (2) and one 32 A ed several members of ihe each for Bowling Green, Cincin-natt- i, radical departure from the box calls for brief features on Fusionists (Frank Meyer) standard sterotyped yearbook each department interspersed faculty to express iheir views Ohio Wesleyan, Toledo, Wit- 34 on drugs relative io ihe report. tenberg and Wooster. ethos has been forecast for with individual sports and what Libertarians (Ludwig Von Reveille '68 by Their extensive comments Kenyon Provost Bruce Hay- its editor, Gregory Spaid calls "campaigns." Mises) 11 Spaid. appear on page ihree of this is to A campaign, according to Spaid, Objectivists (Ayn Rand) 8 wood said, "It gratifying see issue. Reaction to these opin- Pointing out that the book will will be a photo feature of several Greater public awareness is that the small liberal arts college in reality ions, and comment on any as- is able to compete be a "yearbox" and not pages dealing with a particular YAF's end goal. "We want to in the much a pect of the problem of drugs, 1945, 74 yearbook, editor Spaid proceed- topic. topics include: com- sought after honor. Since Tentative present the other ; view," ed with in- is invited in the form of letters Kenyon Wil- alacrity to explain the poetry readings, non-Keny- on ments Chuch Lantz, who wants students have been novation. lo Ihe editor for the next issue. son recipients." Haywood noted See BOXED, Page 6 See YAF, Page 6 Basically, the new Reveille will that a 20 year study by the Uni- be a yearbox because it will, ob- versity of the South ranked Ken- viously enough, come in a box, Take Pipe yon fifth in the nation when Wil- not in the standard binding. Pages son honors were compared with will therefore be bound to the the number of students graduated. covering box in no way, and can With 14 Wilson winners in the be Maintenance Licks Campus Grud taken out individually for See WILSON, Page 6 scrutiny. A hinged lid will pro- by Bob Garland vide easy access. Spaid was quick to point out Director of Plant and Opera- Hour Increase Plan the advantages. Pages can be tions Harry G. 'Roberts, Lt. USN, made to fold out, and it will be ret., presented his winter term Initiated by WKC0 possible dur- to photo- of the campus rnessage 21-ye- run postersize state WKCO, Kenyon's ar old graphs Collegian inter- as large as about 40" x ing an exclusive j student operated radio station, has 40". Foldouts type not view from maintenance head- of this are -- doubled its broadcasting hours. to be ' K ft .. v.: confused with the normal quarters. i On the air until recently only meaning "foldout" connotes to the Covering a wide range of local in evenings, WKCO average will now American male. minor disasters, Lt. Roberts first broadcast 11 a.m. to 5 p.m: Mon- Artistically speaking, the free addressed himself to the problem day through Friday, and 7 a.m. Pages will be an advantage be- of sewage taking an indirect path to 2 a.m. Sunday through Friday.
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