<<

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 , 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. 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 of Beirut, one per cent (.38) of Ohio's full-tim- 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. cause individual photographs can from toilets on the Hill to the --.- j.4i According to station manager be taken out of context for per- nearest shower drains. The main- Alan Kobrin, the new hours will usal. The overall effect will be a tenance boss suspects malicious be an expansion of existing much more fluid book, or box. foul play on the clogging of the shows, featuring the same hard In keeping with the fluid na- main pipe draining the Hill. "You rock in the daytime that made ture, Spaid will put a rough unity wouldn't believe what we pulled MAINTENANCE MESS outside BushnelL one of several recent WKCO evening programming mto the book, but will avoid di- out of there," he snapped. snafus. The excavation, affectionalely dubbed "Harry's Hole" by famous. viding it into independent sec-"n- s, Concerning the recent cold spell Bushnell residents in honor of the maintenance chief Harry G. Following 11 p.m., the station such as academics, sports in many rooms on the Hill, the Roberts, has so far claimed the lives of three drunks and one water will feature blues, folk, jazz, and and the like. Basic plan of the See CRUD, Page 6 buffalo. the oldies but goodies as before. February 23, 1968 Page 2 E KENYON COLLEGIAN 'Pextfiective fje enpon Collegian A Weekly Journal of Student Opinion American Vietnam Policy Defended Box 308 Gambier, Ohio 43022 427-224- 4 by Thomas Y. Au people known Vietnam exists causes of the protest over the war. Editor David W. Hoster Sports Editor but might not care more. I will try to explain American Richard Gelfond Ten years ago, 99 of the That the reasons the U. S. is presence in Vietnam by answer- American people did not know ing of the strongest argu- Associate Editor Foreign Correspondents: involved there have not been three John Smyth Tom Lifson where Vietnam was and could- made sufficiently clear to the ments against our intervention. James Fine n't care less. Today these same American public is one of the 1. We have no right to be there Managing Editor Photographic Staff because it is a civil war. His- Bob Boruchowitz Head, Joe France torically, South Vietnam and Steven Willner North Vietnam have never been Taggart Bill part of the same country. There Features Editor Phil Rizzo Legislative Robert Garland Senate no are cultural, national, or ethnic Copy Editors: ties. The only ties they ever had Tom Au, Richard Alper, Stephen Christy, Greg Lenske, was the fact that both were parts Harold Levy, David Robinson, Ron Smith. Powers Restricted of French Indochina.. The ani- Contributing Editors: by Bob Strong the Senate to be active, dynamic mosity between Northerners and Kosiakowski, Larry and decisive; they expect Senate Southerners within the Saigon Jonathan Battle, Jeffrey Fisher, Artur The presidential veto of the Glass, Bob Strong, Andy Moffit, Richard Baehr., Steve to be legislative in the strictest government is conclusive evidence women's hours change has oc- Silber. sense. This is not possible and so of this. casioned a great deal of discus- Since the partition of Indochina Staff: sion about the power of Campus See SENATE, Page 6 Verral, Bruce Haywood, G. in 1954, Ho Chi Minh has estab- Robert Maclntyre, Charles and as a legisla- Dwight Weith, Michael Venus, Gary Rosenthal, Paul Senate its role lished a militaristic regime in the Douglas, Cris Calhoun, Anthony LoBello, Dave Balfour, tive body. Most of this discussion North, not a nationalist one. If Chuck Kenrick, Tom Baley, Jim Nordberg, Robert Andrews, like most of that which goes on Ho was a local nationalist, he Andy Bersin, Richard Brean. in Senate has been futile and would not have stressed the de- Comptrollers Business Dan Grum fruitless. In actuality Compus eltet velopment of military strength, he Senate has no real power and is Mr. & Mrs. Merrill O. Burns Circulation Carl E. Olsson woud not have fermented gueril- not ultimately even a legislative la warfare in Laos, Thailand, Joseph L. Lavieri Advisor Gordon Johnson body. Erratum South Vietnam and Cambodia. A "Feather on your chicken?? My people are supposed It is tempting to satirize Sen- real nationalist would have stay- to pull all the feathers out." Saga Dick ate procedures. Meetings are To the Editor: ed at home and minded his own long, travia abounds, President My comment that the guided business. Instead he chose to ex- pand Lund is more a guest than a elective system was more com- militarily. member, few meetings are fully fortable for faculty than the basic Those who seriously believe Curriculum attended, the passage of signifi- courses is a far more telling one that the war started as a spon- cant legislation is a rare occasion. than the report that I "found the taneous revolution in the South to revolu- Reflecting on our recent concern for handling of the wo- But my intention is not to criti- new curriculum 'a joy and a com- have a lot learn about is to tions. Spontaineous uprisings men's college, we have decided to take a close and thoroughly cize the Senate as much as it fort.' " My opinion of the basic clarify the way Senate must be rarely succeed. They lack the objective look at the state of planning in several areas of the courses was fairly reported, why viewed. color a phrase never high degree of organization, plan- College. then it with To be precise. ,The Constitu- used, not in my vocabulary, and ning, logistics, and manpower aspects of the Our immediate concern is one of the central tion: "Campus Senate shall be the worst of all dead to origi- that the V.C. exihibit. Such an new college curriculum. In the first several Collegians after principal legislative body of the nality? , organization does not spring from Spring Vacation, we will carry a series of articles dealing with Campus government." The min- I realize it is very easy to mis- the ground. utes: In the most recently posted Revolutions are highly sophisti- self-evaluati- academic on for expanding programs within thz quote a person, especially one minutes of Campus Senate meet- who often treats the spoken word cated enterprises, which both Mao departments, i.e., introducing new course offerings, particularly 7 8 & 9 13 Tung ing no (nos. Feb and like a warped victrola, but please, Tze and Ho Chi Minh real- inter-disciplina- ry studies, re-evaluat- ing the seminars and and Feb. 19 have not been posted at if you must do so, do it with color. ized early in their careers. The existing programs. this writing) there were two I offer the following substitutes: V.C. organization does not show any sign The articles will deal with all departments in random votes recorded in a meeting that Mr. Slate found the new cur- of amateurism. Both presumably took several hours North Vietnam and China affirm order. It is hoped that bringing such planning before the entire riculum 'fraught with naught but one to table an IFC rush rules the supra-nation- al character of community will stimulate an open concern for planning in this interest,' 'juice to his risibles,' proposal, the other to form a new 'too untouched by human hands,' the war. area has so far been lacking. sub-committ- ee 2. corrupt that DWH to examine "the 'filled with the miasma of time.' We are supporting a dimensions of social life in Gam- All those things might have regime. I admit the South bier." emanated at one time or other Vietnamese government is rid- dled corruption. no UPCOMING LECTURES The rest of the meeting con- from this agitated thing I call my with But more so than most Asian govern- A. DENIS BALY: "The Geography of Monotheism," Sun- sisted of the following: "Proce- mind, but 'a joy and a comfort' dural arrangements concerning now I ask you? (I pray that I ment (Japan, the Philippines, day, Peirce Hall Lounge, 4 p.m. Malaya, instance). the presentation of the commit- never find Kenyon's curriculum Thailand, for FRED HALSTEAD (Socialist-Worker- s' Candi- Presidential Under its rule from 1954-6- 0 the tee's report were discussed . . . the 'a joy and an ugh!' comfort.) date): .Tuesday, Rosse Hall, 8 p.m., Reception in Peirce people did lived in peace. A per- Provost moved . . . Mr. Crump Joseph Slate Lounge following. son's life was not in jeopardy; his promised to follow up . . . debate WILLIAM P. ALSTON: "Toward an IHocutionary Act taxes were not burdensome; his ensued . . , the possibility of form- Theory of Meaning," 4 p.m. Feb. 29, Philo Hall. To the Editor: family was intact. The govern- ing a more general statement . . . lis Collegian of ment, although very efficient, HARRY CLOR: "What is Obscenity and What Wrong ramifications for the larger com- In an article in the not with It?" 4 p.m., March 3, Faculty Lounge, Lower February 15, 1968, on the current was not extremely oppressive. munity . . . initial report of pro- Deimpsey. I am as The U.S. supports present gress ,is expected by the end of curriculum, represented the spring vacation in view of holding that anthropology andor "corrupt" regime because it is the ... only the complicated course of the dis- sociology will not teach a student government South Vietnam to think. You say: has. For better or worse, the U.S. cussion . . . the Provost moved "Professor Banning . . . as- is not in the business of creating : . . ,debate ensued." Though all of this is grossly out of context, serts that a liberal education democracies out of thin air. Those it proves that while Campus Sen- is to teach a student how to who accuse the U.S. of colonialism ate may well be the principal think, not to load him down and imperialism should realize legislative body, it .is not prin- with facts. Anthropology and that it would be far more advan TOnter 1968 cipally a legislative body. sociology, he feels, will not tageous and less frustrating for accomplish this aim." the U.S. to conduct the war uni- There is too much discussion, I do not now remember pre- laterally, not having to work with too much referral, too much con- cisely what I said to your re- the present government. However cern community ramifica- I tbus 3Jnterpre - for the porter, but what I intended to say what we are doing now shows a too many reports, too many $ tions, would have the second sentence respect for institutions developed committees Senate to be de- An article on modern translation for quoted above read, "Anthropology by the Vietnamese, even to the ex- voted to pure legislation. by Jeff Henderson and sociology, he feels, are not tent of underwriting a "corrupt'' x This is as it should be. The necessary to accomplish this aim." regime, rather than trying to con- x problem is that students expect Cyrus W. Banning duct the war the American way . porrotomg To contend that the North - Vietnamese or the Viet Cong A story by Barnard Dale would provide a better regime The Kenyon Choir and Singers Present than the present one is super- fluous. For one thing, the war is 'THE SECRET LIST OF ADRIAN MESSENGER' not being fought over who can provide the better government. Democrats do not go around kill- Daniel Mark Epstein x Rosse Hall ing Republicans for the sake of M. S. x Hobbie good government. One simply Friday Night 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 does not kill in order to get bet- X Paul Kahn p.m. ter government. Nor are we there X Artur Kosiakowski $1.50 Couple, $1.00 Single simply so the S. Vietnamese can X Toby Olson have a choice between what kind Carl Thayler Benefit film for Singers and Choir of government they want. That the V.C. or N.V. could European Tour i 3 provide a more efficient govern-Se- e VIETNAM, Page 6 February 22, 1968 THE KENYON COLLEGIAN Page 3 Wake of Drug Report Artist DuBois Professors Speak Out Sings Folk at VI by Harold Levy Fletcher plans to teach guitar, but does not expect to make a career A superlative evening folk On Drug Issues Raised of out of music. music was presented toy Fletcher DuBois expressed hope that DuBois, of the freshman class, at students show enough interest in the Village Inn Friday. Hecht: McCulloh: Kading: last his folk music to make more per- Accompanying himself on the formances worthwhile; at the guitar, pro- DuBois presented a present, however, he is uncertain gram Tough Line Secrecy And Report Found consisting mainly of modern whether he will give further folk music by such artists as Bob Dylan, Donovan, Tom Paxton and Best Policy Social Danger; Contradictory Gordon Lightfoot. DuBois' per- formance proved to be most en- East Bay Artists For A Real On tertaining, as he introduced his Senate Problem? Marijuana songs with witty comments and by Edmund P. Hecht by William E. McCulloh by Daniel Kading observations. Although the at- Shown in Library Professor of German Professor of Classics Professor of Philosophy tendance was light during the first "East Bay Realists," an exhibi- two hours of the performance, lithographs "Drugs on Campus" is an ad- "It seems clear to the Commit- The report of the Committee on tion of paintings, and DuBois played to a packed house drawings which young mirably objective and succinct tee that the overriding fact is Drugs is admirably simple and in four for the last hour. artists take an incisive look at compilation of facts and thoughts that marijuana use forces an un- straight-forwar- d. It seems to me, DuBois became interested in American life is on display now on a subject about which too natural secrecy on the user and however, that the discussion of folk music at the age of 13. For Chalmers Library. little is generally known. Since makes him legally a criminal and marijuana is markedly ambival- in about four years he has appeared The painters Robert Bechtle, the use of marijuana appears to that this, without considering any- ent, that what one is led to con- at the Cellar Door in Washington, Charles Gill, Gerald Gooch and most widely accepted among is serious clude from page 7 8 re- be thing else, a social and of the D.C.; over Thanksgiving, he per- certain individuals and groups at danger." port is importantly at odds with Richard McLean have been formed at the club with well-know- n closely associated in Oakland for colleges and , the em- Question; What kinds of se- what one is led to conclude from folk-singe- rs Ian and Syl- a number of years. Their work is phasis given in the report to mari- crecy are natural or unnatural, pages 9 and 10. I want to com- via. He has also appeared on directly related to the tradition of juana is commendable. and how is secrecy a social dan- pare the discussion in these two radio in Washington. American realism subject While factual and statistical ger? places, trying to determine which in DuBois does not restrict him- American landscapes, personali- materials will hardly dissuade Wider question: What is social part is the sounder. self to one kind of folk music, ties and manners but the ba- habitual drug users from the con- danger? And is it always bad? On pages 7 and ,8 we find what but tries to play whatever appeals nality the subject matter and sumption of such substances, the Some societies perhaps should be of is certainly on the whole, legal to him. However, he admits to the detachment of the artist report does provide the Campus endangered; others not. Some di- consideration aside, a favorable being a fanatical Joan Baez fan. achieve the effect of satire. Senate with an excellent basis for vided, threatened societies may be view of the use of marijuana. These four artists all have used the formulation of rules and regu- far more worth living in than Here we learn that marijuana photograph taken lations governing the use of some placidly cohesive. feel there should be serious con- the either unlike alcohol or tobacco is not sideration on the part of users." themselves or found in magazines drugs, in particular of marijuana, The report should give some habit-formin- g, and also that (Of or picture postcards as the on our Campus. consideration to the viewpoint course users should recognize again unlike alcohol and tobacco basis for their work and as a In its deliberations of such rules that marijuana has some positive that they ought not drive when it has no lasting physical ef- means of separating themselves and regulations the Campus Sen- benefits to confer upon a society. they are incompetent to do so. fects on the user. Although the from their subjects. ate might be well advised to make Such a claim is often granted re- But notice the phrase "this is only immediate effect of its use may Bechtle has painted a series of the following assumptions: spectability in the case of alcohol. one specific physical danger," be one of anxiety or nausea, it implying typical middle-clas- s, architectur- That a sensitive and fulfilled Otherwise, so far as I can that there are others. may also be one of quietude or ally uninspired American houses, life is possible resorting judge, the report is an excellent What are the others?) We find without exultation. Careful investigation late-mod- the suggestion use in front of which large el to chemical substances, mari- summary of relevant information next that the does not in any way substantiate may to "drop- automobiles are prominently dis- juana or alcohol. and opinion. As inexpert, I would of mariuana lead the claim that the use of mari- ping out." (No played in painstaking detail. His That there is nothing inherent- not be publicly judging at all, but evidence for this juana leads to criminal behavior, is given and directly contra- lithographs depict such common ly educational, intellectual or was asked. When a policy draft is it addiction to heroin, apathy, or in dicts the quotation from NASPA household objects as the vacuum sophisticated in the use of such circulated, there may be more efficiency. I One of course could on page 8, which disclaims any cleaner. substances; occasion for efflatus. become psychically dependent connection between marijuana-usin- g Gill is exhibiting several in a That the effects of drugs erode upon marijuana, but one could and apathy.) The long para- new series of paintings, portray- and eventually destroy the self-discipli- ne the use of natural or synthetic become psychically dependent on graph following speculates on the ing common place contemporary necessary to acquire substances in order to escape the almost anything. If a person gets possibility "any cohesiveness subjects with religious titles a knowledge and to manipulate that demands of reality represents an too exhilarated from the use of is effec- couple in a car, called "An An- thoughts; or 'sense of community' attitude which is irreconcilable marijuana, he might perhaps be a tively destroyed by marijuana nunciation of Sorts;" parents That the need to use marijuana with the professed orientation of threat on the highways, but this use." (This seems to be the and two faceless infants, labeled and other chemical substances, be the College community. is not established statistically, and "apathy" charge once more, and "Adoration of the Magi of they stimulants, depressants or To condone, even implicitly, the in any case the solution is of again no evidence is given in its Sorts." hallucinogens, is indeed sympto- possession, the use or the sale of course not to drive under these support.) The paragraph goes on Traveling Americans are the matic of an emotional or psychol- such substances by some of our circumstances. All in all, then, we to say, has been suggested theme of McLean's paintings, ogical disturbance; "It students, would threaten the very learn from pages 7 and 8 of the that drug use is a symptom rather which are derived from photos That the rejection of conscious idea of the College as envisioned Committee's report that mari- than a cause of many social and and postcards. Subjects include reality in favor of a drug-induce- d by its founders and as cherished juana is a remarkably safe sub- individual problems." (This seems "Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Vincent on frame of experience tends to by its faculty and the majority stance, producing much the pleas- to me uncharitable. I should sup- their Way to Biarritz for Spring create a social which is attitude of its present students. Students ant effect of alcohol without any pose that many marijuana users and Summer," and a duck hunter contrary to the purpose and goals habit-formin- g unwilling or incapable of coping of the dangerous have no particular "problems," postcard painted in the center of Ken-yo- n of an education as sought by Ken-yo- with the pressures of life at n characteristics of alcohol. To say that they are motivated by per- a tropical lagoon. students; College without the aid of that marijuana is "no worse" than fectly "healthy" considerations.) Multiple images of the same That the atmosphere of trust hallu- alcohol is to do it a great injus- depressants, stimulants or The appraisal pages 9 figure bring motion into Gooch's which generally studen- on and underlies of is 12-fo- ot cinogens, and students bent upon tice , the use alcohol very work notably a wide t-faculty Ken-yo- 10 closes with this statement: "It relationships at n expanding their mind by chemical dangerous and the use of mari-jan- a painting showing fifteen views of College per- seems clear to the Committee thai is dependent on means, should be forced to seek is not dangerous at all if one artist Roy de Forest riding a sonal sincereity, integrety and the overriding fact is that mari- their education elsewhere. assumes , a responsible attitude child's tricycle. sobriety. secrecy juana use forces an unnatural The which of Given a clear understanding of toward driving. necessity secrecy on the user and makes surrounds the use of such rules and regulations, stu- marijuana seriously impairs If the report stopped with the him legally a criminal and that this dents feel the obligation to expose Compliments of trust, not only faculty points just mentioned, there this, without considering anything between fellow students who do not com- and among would be no doubt but that the else, is a serious social danger." Peoples Bank students, but also the ply. There are fortunately large students Committee thinks that if it were (Now there are of course a num- of Gambier themselves; universities in this country which That the consumption legal to do so one could take ber of serious objections to dis- regular afford the anonymity in Member of F.D.I.C. of drugs students marijuana with relative impunity. obeying the law. But these objec- and similar substances which the individual may live en- presupposes the of But now let us look at pages 9 tions which the report does availability tirely as he sees fit. considerable money. and 10. We are told that while not go into should be kept sums of In fact the administration of the Since not drugs "high" on marijuana a person is separate from the question to all consumers of College might seriously consider are financially unlikely to perform any depend- which the report does address it- independent, it is asking incoming students to sign inevitable able academic work and that "the self, namely, the extent, if any, that the unfunded con- disclaimer affidavit before sumer a drug college must make every effort to to which the use of marijuana is will evenually have to re- admitting them. sort to asocial act to support his see that opportunity for excel- physically or psychologically or habit. lent academic performance be en- socially harmful.) It must therefore be hoped that couraged 'for all students." (But Pages 7 and 8 of the Commit- Campus surely the college must make not indi- Senate will acknowl- tee's report would seem to FIRST-KNO- X edge Ken-yo- every every reasonable NATIONAL BANK the necessity to deny n OUR PLACE effort but cate that marijuana is a relatively College students the right to effort, and surely it would be no harmless substance; pages 9 and use, to possess, or to offer for more reasonable on this ground 10 would seem to indicate that it behind Fair Hall to to pro- sale substances like marijuana, or prohibit marijuana than See KADING, Page 6 any de- hibit alcohol. And it wouldn't be other chemical stimulants, Public Square pressants and hallucinogens. Not reasonable to prohibit alcohol on for ground.) The point about the moral or ethical, not for legal hot sandwiches this Dine at Dorothy's Counry-Wid- e Banking reasons, dangers of driving when under and not even because of - Mount Vernon the the influence of marijuana is Beer Sandwiches concern for the physical and homemade pie Danville well-bein- report Psychological g of our mentioned again, and the Open 8 a.m. to 11:45 p.m. Centerburg says is only one specific students, although these aspects "This Monday - Saturday Fredericktown cannot be ignored, but because physical danger about which we February 22, 1963 Page 4 THE KENYON COLLEGIAN Swimmers Toppled by Tom Baley Saturday, February 17, 1968, turned out to foe a sad day at swimming pool for Kenyon, as the Lords swam their poorest meet of the year i J against the second strongest team in the OAC, and lost 53-5- 1. The Lords had numerous chances to win, and let all of them slip by. In Coach Russell's words, 'The fellas just thought they ! could win hands down, and did- n't realize what was happening until it was all over. If we swim 7 like that in the OAC champion- ships, we won't win, and what is . f f :' . worse we won't qualify for the Nationals." Coach Russell had a few other ' n 1 P A : L remarks to make in his disap- -- - Jo - pointment. "I am very disap- Francs 1 his opponent to mats. m pointed in the support we have Fred Llewellyn driving the IT received from the Kenyon stu- dent body this year. They don't -- seem to realize how vital their Fred Llewellyn A Fine L to continued suc- Jo Franc help is our cess. Next week we will need all clearing Ihe boards as three frustrated Mount Union Dick Fox the support the school can muster players look on. when we travel to Granville. This Freshman Grappler past weekend Stitt, Jarvis, and by Michael Venus and superb takedown techniques company were too much in con- have led him to this fine record. Perhaps most noticeable junction with the overconfidence the In the match against Mount Lords Dismember feature of Fred Llewellyn, fresh- the team had." Union, Fred almost seriously in- re- man 160 pound wrestler, is his His words were echoed and jured his opponents after a pin in meet. characteristic broken laugh reso- 116-6- 9 echoed in the results of the the second period. Mt. Union, Larry Witner swam almost three nating from his presence. Yet on Fred comes to Kenyon from 51-- 36 mats, business. by Andy Bersin Kenyon to a halftime bulge. seconds off his best times in the the Fred is all Elyria High School, Ohio, a team With Rinks hitting for 25, Mule 100. Pete Cowen took fourth in Llewellyn, although extremely Kenyon adjacent to Oberlin. Elyria is a Last Saturday night the 5-- 50, to modest about his performance 6 from the field and the team the which he is accustomed noted state wrestling power, plac- basketball team slaughtered Mt. fin- this season, posts one of the finest a torrid 63 the lead seemed winning. The medley relay ing four members of the team in Union by the score of 116-6- 9. team, a flashing quite secure. It was. ished second, which doesn't score records on the the state championships last year. Mt. Union had the tenth best 6-1- -1. easily Fox scored on a good follow up any points. He could have been At Elyria, Fred wrestled varsity defensive average in the country. undefeated, losing his only match tip and we were off and running The entire team did not let only one year at 175 pounds. He Before the Raiders ran into the com- in final minute against a tough again in the second half. Follow- down, though. Bill Howard, the only weighted 152. The tight com- Lords they somehow managed to competitor Oberlin opponent. ing the pattern Kit hit one of his ing through as the fine petition at Elyria in the 145, 152 play slow down ball keeping is, placed But is generally displeased patented corner shots. Rinka hit and swimmer he first Fred and 160 pound classes prevented down their opponents score as performance. not a bomb and a slick layup on a in the 1000, and had a good time with his "I'm him from wrestling at these lower well as their own. Before a pack- Fred, beautiful feed from Dilly, a neat in the 500, placing second against wrestling well at all," said weight brackets. Despite this ed winter weekend crowd the Koller-Frank-Kalmba- ck I a poor tip by Fox and great inside moves tough Mike Jarvis. The "because have attitude." hardship in weight, he fought to Lords scoring machine destroyed fine Dunlop trio did their His record he credits greatly 4-- by Parmelee and made it a 7 record and a fourth- - place that image. 70-4- 8. 200 to somewhat Ohio part in sweeping the breast, the lackluster in the Buckeye Conference Tour- The swish of the nets was the The remaining twelve minutes 1-2- -3, but it was not quite enough Conference competition at the 160 predominant sound that emerged nament. mainly belonged to Dilly. The to offset an overall team pound bracket. Fred came to Kenyon because from the Lords bucket. Captain Kenyon press was like a vise, In fact, Llewellyn's strength Fox opened the barrage with a he was primarily interested in rarely letting the Raiders pene- academics. He is generally pleased short jumper 34 seconds into the half-cour- trate t. Once Dunlop got game and this was followed with with Kenyon and currently plans his hands on the ball it was an to major in one of the sciences a three point play by Kit Marty. automatic two. From long range The Purple Raiders got a Trackmen Edge with a healthy sampling of hu- or up-tig- ht he fired and with the Zie-lask- manities. couple of early baskets from o one and one in effect it appeared but it was all over for them that Dilly lived at the foul line. as the Kenyon cagers went on a by One "man Oberlin On several occasions the rampage. Rinka went wild hitting of moves" made the Raiders look by Bill Lokey a mistake in the scoring was and two long range jumpers, like fools as they ineptly hacked found that gave Kenyon a 1 point Despite working under crowded three twisting layups, then him underneath. After eight quick edge. conditions fieldhouse, and "Mule" Parmelee downtowned points by Dunlop there was Rinks in the Art Hensley, the strong point of running with only a handful of one, followed by three more calmly hitting a foul shot, thus Kenyon's team, again was top per- men, the indoor team has points for Rinks. This sent the shattering the conference scoring track former. He set a new fieldhouse Lords to a devastating 22-- 6 ad- done quite well this year so far mark of 711 held by Don Carlos. record with a mark in the high 93-- 1 tS vantage with more and has posted a 3-- 3 record. than thirteen Hopefully Rinks can gun in an- jump of 6'3". Hensley also took minutes to go in the half. Last Saturday the Lord runners other 150-20- 0 before the season firsts in the broad jump, high Knox split a meet with Capital and Beverage Coach Harrison made sure that ends. hurdles and tied for first in the Mt. Union had no chance of play- Oberlin by the score Capital 68, By now the Lords held an 81-4- 8 low hurdles. Company by em- Kenyon 46 and Oberlin 45. It had ing their brand of ball lead and all Raider hopes for a David Yamauchi, vaulting for ploying court press. The been incorrectly reported before the full respectable score had vanished. the first time this year, set a new Lords executed maneuver that Kenyon and Oberlin tied but the Quickly, Dilly again took control fieldhouse record in the pole Marty doubled well as and Rinks and poured through another six vault of 13'3&". and teamed well while Parmelee teen, including 10 straight from Greg Johnson tied for first in Dunlop anticipated the Raiders the line. With four minutes re- For the Best Laundered the 55 yd. dash and took second desperate passes, coming up with The Alcove maining Coach gave the subs a in 300 yard looking Shirts it's the run. many interceptions and chance to show their form as the more like cornerbacks on a foot- Considering the conditions un- festive crowd thundered its ap- der which the track team has Mount Vernon ball team. Their basic weakness proval for the starters. B ball-handlin- been working they done a exploited, non-existe- nt g, AIR'S have But the team hadn't finished very good job so far this year, Mt. Union was thus in for the show as Big Fin foul 3 W. High hit three and hopes are high for a good Restaurant Cocktails a long night of frustration. shots and threw in a shot from The Raiders a more Mt. Vernon showing at the Great Lakes had little the deep corner that put the ceil- success the latter part of the half championships in Granville this ing in jeopardy. Lee Johnson hit Saturday. and managed to establish some a layup and Larry Radefeld ended semblance of an offensive but the Raiders misery with two Rinks and Mule continued their bombs as the final tally showed long distance accuracy, moving a 116-6- 9 triumph. Rinks and Dun- lop had superb nights with 38 and on the Square The 32 points respectively while Par- Accent melee had a good game with 15. House Hotel Curtis COOPER-BESSEME- R Contemporary Welcome To Accessories for Ringwalt's North Sandusky Modern Living Mount Vernon Men's Shop Mount Vernon, Ohio 405 North Main Mount Vernon Downtown - 1st Floor Phone 397-012- 1 22, 1968 February THE KENYON COLLEGIAN Page 5

Dayton Flyers Co-Captai- ns Grounded by Swimming Hale and -- Lord Wrestlers Hutchinson They Set Examples by Dave Balfour

The lost to the Dan Hale Kemyon wrestling team last Wednesday at Wertheimer Field House. of by Pride won Marion The Lords the score of

23-1- 7 count on excellent perfor- by John Smyth mances by the middle weights, as Co-Capta- The pride of Marion, in Dan Hale is clocking usual, and some very good ones the by the heavyweights. There were best times of his life and staging a triumphant senior no pins against the Lords in these year with the Kenyon swim team. For the last four years weight classes. the team has enjoyed the aid of Dan's versatility, which This was only Dayton's first is documented by his rapid individual medley times, and his year fielding a wrestling team dedication, which is documented by his unofficial OAC record and many of their wrestlers did of six regurgitations show inexperience. in one season in the line of aquatic duty. At 115 Mark Smith went unop- Dan has been swimming competitively since the third posed as Dayton was not prepared grade, but has never been allowed to swim his favorite event, to wrestle in this division. Tom the 50 yd. freestyle, or specialize with a particular stroke. Aberant, at 123, showed some In the recent past his principle events have been the I.M. very good moves pinning Rittle and the 100 200 yd. all of which been in his match. At 130, Andy Hill and backstrokes, have lost by a fall at 1:09 to Reihle. going better than ever for him this year. He has now com- 137, pletely Barry Burckhardt, at got recovered from a punctured eardrum which kept him f ) several reversals enroute to an out of practices and slowed him down at the beginning of the easy 6-- 2 decision over Scaglione. season. Rick Greiser and Gary Nave, at The outlook for the swim team is so rosy Dan has 145 and 152, both pinned their that men at :54 and 4:22 of each con- found a need for some perspective and has assumed the test. Rick ran up an 11-- 1 count position of Team Pessimist. Before the Oberlin meet he befoe pinning Lafferty. Nave, a-he- ad alone correctly predicted that Oberlin would defeat the 6-- 2, had little trouble dis- Lords if they failed to purge themselves of overconfidence. posing of Luisi. His forecast for the conference meet isn't gloomy, but he At 160, Fred Llewellyn received points five front-lin- e a forfeit and Rick Davenport lost out that, "We have lost good swimmers

4-- de- a 2 decision to Ferrells at 167. this season that we didn't expect to lose, and Oberlin is At 177 and 191, Ed Lentz and termined. We have to get on the stick. This year's fresh- Rick Yorde fell to Schraff and men and sophomores have had no contact with the team Howard by 4-- 1 and 13-- 5 counts. mm that won the conference by only a point and a half." Rick nearly pinned his man early Dan born before being overcome later on. was and rised in Marion, which he describes At heavyweight, Ed Gaines was as the culture and fashion center of the world. The O.K. Bill Taggart up 4-- 0 over on penalt- Cafe Warren G. Harding Memorial top Dan's list Greenhorn and the Co-Capta- in Doug Hutchinson. ies, but eventually lost a 54 of great places to visit in Marion. decision on stalling and riding Last summer Dan coached Marion's team of teeny time. swimmers, from 10 and to 17 and under, while Ken-yon- 's Doug Hutchinson Last Saturday, the Lords fell to under the Capital Crusaders in a 21-1- 5 Dick Russell coached a similar group in Mount Vernon. contest that could have gone "My only comment on the Coach," says Hale, "Is that when either way because there were we met at the championship, my .Marion kids won by 1 One three Very pins. Few draws and no Smith in points." lost his first match of year to by Chris Leach medley relay, and the 800 free the Dan has particularity fond memories of the 10 year old B. Skrobot by a close 3-- 2 decisi- Douglas E. Hutchinson grad- relay to name a few. Most of on. 5-- girls on his team, who were strangely attracted to his 5'10", Tom Aberant won a 4 con- the spring was spent in study test. This match was much easier 150 lb. frame. Other than that, his sex life is a "pretty uated from Linsly Military in biology, a course which in- for Tom than the score indicates touchy" topic of conversation. "You know how it is with all Institute in Wheeling, West terested him a great deal. because of four minutes riding the guys running around in those skimpy suits and taking all Virginia in June, 1964. He time. In the fall of his junior year, . . . I have been sleep- came to Kenyon College that Hill those vitamin E pills Hutchinson and drew with Zimmerman at September he was accepted into honors 130 ing together at the conference meet for three years now." and, like all of us, and Beiswenger defeated John biology. His swimming contin- Friis-Mikkels- al- en 2-- 0 at 137. At Although Dan often enjoys presenting a front of sexual he became a nobody. Now, ued to improve and he set two 145, in perhaps the best contest flexibility, he is actually only guilty of frequent pilgrimages most four years later, he has of 1- -1 new records: 200 yd. co-capt- and ain the the day Greiser drew with to Ohio U. with his beloved white '59 Ford, Beaucefalous. made himself a somebody: Dick Carter, one of 400 yd. individual medley. At the bet Dan's dedication to his work in the Honors English program of the swimming team, wrestlers in the conference. Nave end of his junior year, he and he is of department's most a biology honors student, re- the defeated Seargeant 3-- 0 152 boarders on fanatical, one the at and co-capta- was elected in of the 5-- only spected by everyone he knows. Llewellyn decisioned Harris 2 highly prized students. Swimming and women are the swim team, and, characteristi- at 160. things known to have distracted him. In the fall of 1964, Doug At cally told no one about this point, the Lords were thought about trying out for it ahead 13-1- 0, but Capital's strength Around his division, Phi in the upper weights was too r the swim team just to see if he Kappa Sigma, Hutch has many much. Kenyon n n could do it. He made the team lost three decisions faces, from the delighted little and drew in the match. did other but not have a spectacular guy to the angry young man Davenport, at 167, lost 6-- 2 and year. The course of study was when experiment is not go- Hansley beat Lentz 3-- 0 at 177. an moderate and he took the same in- Yorde lost to Resch 4-- 0 at 191 ing well. For all Doug's courses most of us our and Ed Gaines was held to a 4-- 4 take volvement in biology, he has tie with Jackson on riding time. first year at Kenyon. When not neglected swimming. Up at spring arrived Doug went out 7 : 00 a.m. several times a week,, TAKEDOWNS for lacrosse and made the he goes to the pool to work out Greiser and Vogeler couldn't team. with his teammates at the pool. wrestle at Oberlin in a match 'hat could have been decided by The sophomore year was One other aspect of Doug their presence . . . Three draws good to him in many respects. that cannot go unmentioned: cost the Lords the match Satur- Continuing with swimming, he is a good party man. day and against Mount they pos- L Doug set a school record in the Whether in training or not, sibly could have won also. individual medley, a tough Doug always has a good time. Smith lost his only match and 5-- 1, event. Doug's team spirit is A good great friend, 's While Aberant won two student, a 4-- of and is 4 (1-1-- shown by great number a good up .. . Hill 1) has the and swimmer all add done well filling in for Vogeler relay records he has helped to to a person who is one in few, Greiser and Nave did nicely set; the 400 free relay, 400 one in very few. during 4-1- the week and are -2 5-- and 3. Llewellyn (6-1-- 1) won two and 4-- Davenport is now 4 .. . Barncord Shoe Repair Saturday, Lemasters the Wittenberg Tigers Soling and Heeling visit the Field House for the last maw '"atch of the year. The Lords sr.-- - 37 Public Men m y Bill Taggart Square Fine Clothes For noPe to end this one on a happy a s Co-Capia- Mount Vernon note. in Dan Hale. February 22, 1968 Page 6 THE KENYON COLLEGIAN Solons Maintenance Winning Continued from page 1 Kading Scrutinizes group of upperclass students Cruel Combat might help to supplement the ex- Paper Creeping isting adviser program in making Senate Drug a cross section of mature opinion Continued from Page 1 injustices? Doesn't a Continued from page 1 ities of a service organization, the minor regarding courses and course con- change in the law fall somewhere King of the Hill pointed out that isn't so harmless after all. Which maintenance baron explained how tent available to freshmen. In ad- near the bottom of the list of de being the largest department we view is the correct one? The evi- a local plumbing contractor ran dition the hope was expressed legal reforms? One may have more problems on campus." dence presented on pages 7 and sirable a cleaning acid through all the that the editor of the Collegian wonder, with Malcolm Mugge- - Not that he's taking his number 8 is based on extensive investiga- radiators during the summer but might put out a course guide for ridge in a recent speech at the one position for granted and rest- tion carried out by highly regard- then failed to completely drain freshmen similar to the critique University of Edinburgh, whether, ing on his laurels, Harry Roberts ed, technically competent research all the acid from the pipes. This it put out two years ago re- to the extent that our colleges reports "we've doing far more that groups. The conclusion suggested has caused a hundred or so com- garding the basic courses. are preoccupied with this issue, work." by a reading of pages 9 and 10, plaints, Roberts hazily estimated. of focus. The role of the resident faculty speculative, they are not rather out Gambier's infamous under- on the other hand, is advisers in each freshman dormi- to ground springs have once again unsupported by evidence, and tory came under question. Some at odds with sprung a leak in Farr basement, YAF a considerable extent 1 freshmen adamantly maintained pages causing men over the Hill Continued from Page the evidence presented on Vietnam the that they had never seen their Continued from Page 2 further wet, or pipe, dreams. 7 and 8. I do not have the techni- to establish YAF at Kenyon. resident advisers and asked the competence to "Even the engineers haven't fig- cal knowledge or ment is not to be denied. Their purpose chiefly educa reason for their presence in the ured it out yet. There must be YAF's is pass judgment on the question of skill in organization is much to be is by dorms. The Dean explained the no- tional, as evidenced its ad which view is the correct one, but admired. But efficiency is not the an answer to it, but so far ideal role of the resident advisers ministrative setup. At the annual there can hardly be any doubt as issue. Their use of it is. It shows body's found one out." The main- and maintained that if inadequ- convention, committees on domes to which view we should accept a callous disregard for human tenance men have figured, how- acies existed in the program it tic, foreign, and student affairs if we were to base our judgment life. The of South Viet- ever, that it is better for the was because personalities were number base- put forward various proposals, on the evidence found in the namese killed by the V.C. through springs to seep through the not performing their defined func- which are then sent out to all Committee's report. terrorism, assassination-lin- g ment floor than to be diverted so tion. He noted that nothing nega- deliberate YAF chapters for approval. In Two further points very brief- Republicans over the issue that they might endanger the tive had been said during the this way, Lantz points out all ly: 1) The use or possession of mass slaughter must be at foundation. Such problems should discussion about the presence of and YAFs can concern themselves marijuana is illegal and college 100 of so-call- ed be avoided in any new construc- faculty advisers as such. least times that the tion as chief Roberts has had his with the organization and its rules are necessarily governed by "indiscriminate" bombing of In to problems of the men out drilling for water in ideals. relation this fact. Any college official who women and children by Ameri- adviser system one member of northern Gambier with negative A statement passed last August openly, or not. so openly, encour- cans They are certainly not acts the Senate noted placement prob- results. by the Michigan Board of Direc- aged its us or possession would of nationalism. lems common to some of the in- Campus sadists will be disap- tors since it had be in a wholly untenable posi- The recent attacks on the South declared that; tellectually acute members of the pointed with the latest news on found marijuana to have no detri- tion. 2) Suppose, as the Commit- Vietnamese cities and the accom- freshmen class. He said that de- the new, sturdier bleachers. There mental effects on the individual, tee's report seems to indicate, the panying killing of innocent civil- spite the Advanced Placement is now a safe seating capacity and that users, except when driv- legal prohibition of marijuana use ians leave no doubt that the V.C. program about six to ten fresh- for a maximum of 2200 in the ing, pose no threat to society: is one of the injustices of our intend to establish a regime based men every year were placed in at fieldhouse, well under the fire time. Still, isn't it one of the on fear. The present regime, al- We believe that areas of per- two courses which they restriction, Mr. Roberts advised. least in beit corrupt, is far superior to any sonal morality involving con- were capable of doing higher "We don't want to violate any based on fear. senting individuals are deci- level work. He laws and have any bleachers that maintained that 3. We aren't wanted there. sions for the individual to de- to Senate collapse." these six ten freshmen became Many of those who advocate with- termine for himself and are not intellectually disenchanted with Continued from page 2 The freshman class will be de- drawal must be under some within the providence of the Kenyon as a lighted with the arrival of new result and transfer- the trivia, the wasted time, the dream that once Americans leave proper function of the state, argued an adviser bedsprings. "We just got them red. He that inactivity create frustration and Vietnam, everything will be pink Therefore system including upperclassmen in" and they should all be instal- be it resolved that dissatisfaction. and rosy, that the killing will posses- could uncover respond led by the end of spring vacation. laws regulating the sale, better and Senate cannot be purely legisla- stop and the people will live hap- These should be a welcome ad sion, and usage of marijuana be to this genuine disenchantment tive because Senate has no jreal pily ever after, that the war will repealed. (if not initially at mid-yea- r) dition to the new mattresses on then power it is not free to exercise end because we don't want to take so pick up an the freshman campus. Comment Lantz notes an example of this that freshmen could prerogatives Where pressures are part in it. The killing will NOT I additional challenging course. ing on the replaced mattresses, need for awareness and under- most numberous and most felt, stop if we leave. In fact it will commander-in-chi- ef Roberts ob standing of the other side at Ken- Certain aspects of the structure prerogatives are most narrow and probably continue on a larger served, "they were fourteen years yon. On the fiftieth anniversary and implementation of orientation Senate was designed to be subject scale. The million refugees that to every important pressure in the old . . . that's about a normal life of the Russian Revolution last were criticized. It was agreed fled to the South in 1954 fled out for a mattress." November 17, he posted a number generally that departmental meet. community, faculty, administra- of fear for their lives. This fear During the last meeting of the of notices YAF had sent him en- ings were a good idea but were tive and student. Senators do not was not unfounded. Board of Trustees, the Trustees- - titled "Communist Revolution" poorly arranged. Complaints sit for hours deciding what should Then there are countless num- Student Affairs Committee de- and listing all the countries over- were registered against the for- be done, they only investigate bers of others who will continue plored the poor dormitory facil- run by Communist since 1917. ums at the beginning of the year what can be done. They are not to fight even if we don't. Many controled by some hidden power, ities on the Hill. In an effort to Several members of the KCE-WV- N, which dragged into the first four more will be decapitated because improve living conditions in which was demonstrating weeks of school. Most freshmen they represent the confrontation they are politically unreliable. No southern Gambier, director Rob that day, tore most of them idown. maintained that they had been of several powers, a confrontation major South Vietnamese group erts has requested all lectured down to. They argued that inevitably creates discussion, with- fraternity Lantz, a Libertarian, sees as the has called for the unilateral presidents to for a system whereby the College delay and inactivity. submit written re initial task of this new chapter drawal of American forces. And ports on the efficiency would convey ,the few essentials With women's hours the Senate to of the "the presentation of the other the killing will not be limited maintenance department each it deemed absolutely necessary in tried to legislate from .a position in viewpoint of ,the Vietnam war. the boundaries of Vietnam. The of their divisions. Mr. Roberts formal fashion. After that the of power. They failed to discover We should win the war and re- fighting will spread to Cambodia now has a growing file of freshmen would have time to that faculty and presidential op- letters move ourselves." Personally he and Thailand. Will American praising the merits of the hammer out their own orientation position would be strong, or if janitors believes in the "domino" theory, withdrawal guarantee peace? in the upperclass dorms, while program and find things out for they did discover its strength, and cites the Australians' and We are not alienating the rest students in Leonard and Old Ken themselves in bull sessions. In they did not respond as they South Koreans' participation as of the world by our presence in yon continue to complain about short it was argued that there normally do with debate, delay, to proof of this. And as opposed to Vietnam. Asian nations, closer their neat, cramped facilities. was no need to impose a struc- and eventual acquiescence to ve- arguments that "we've not letting the War than any one else, do not Reflecting upon the responsibil-- tured orientation program on the hement opposition. When the ,veto the civil war run its course," he feel that they are the next target freshmen; they would inform came everyone was afraid ,that points out the forced on the U.S.'s list for genocide. enlistment themselves concerning the things Senate had lost the power which policies of the Viet Cong They do feel the threat of war and they inactuality it had never had. Boxed North. most wanted and needed. spreading to them if we do with- Vietnamese. If the veto had been anticipated' Continued from Page 1 Some freshmen maintained that draw. Are those Americans who Lantz hopes for a series of films or if Senate had as it they knew little about what Sen- functioned advocate withdrawal willing to Gambier, the theatre, village and speakers to start off Kenyon's normally functions, would ate or anyone else was doing be- there hold themselves accountable if 5 children, girls ("Instead of being YAF. Philip Abot Luce, have been more talk, re- author cause of the poor communications more million or even 10 million people subtle and jamming as many pic of The Road to Revolution and ports, more agendas. The pro- facilities within the college. Ir- were to die if we were to leave? tures as possible of girls into the The New Left, has already agreed posal which was so unacceptable regular and ex post facto read- I fear those who accuse the book in odd places as before," to speak on Vietnam, and Con- to much the community ing of announcements in Peirce of would Johnson administration of crimes Spaid affirms, "we will be blatant gressman John Ashbrook, for have been lost in boring Hall were noted. The lack of a the hours against humanity have lost their and devote an entire campaign to whom Lantz worked, is a of Senate also central and adequate bulletin discussion instead of perspective on their common them."), Hayes Grocery, rural possibility. vetoed a announcements within in dramatic moment of sense. He may be accused of fail- Ohio in its various seasons, and board for presidential Financial problems, however, the freshmen complex was also action. In the end ure to recognize the complexity Mount Vernon. nothing would presently pose the greatest block noted. Inadequacies in campus have happened of the war, and incompetency in Spaid also plans to utilize a which is what happened anyway. unique system for developing to the formation of a Kenyon mail deliveries and postings were its conduct, but not of selfish- YAF. Lantz ness, copy for the box. Tape recorders points out that all discussed. and indifference to the fate chapters must pay dues to responsibilities. im- of the Vietnamese. will be placed hither and yon to the The feeling was expressed that If any one headquarters. He hopes to get six pression 'emerged from two pick up the multifarious sounds freshmen had no sense of involve- the people together soon as a "core" hour meeting on Monday evening of Kenyon, i.e., the colorful ment in the activities of the cam- to promote YAF's foundation was speech patterns, and the tapes and pus at large. In this light they it that freshmen generally Wilson further expansion. were poorly informed concerning will then be arranged and poet- seemed to possess no sense of Continued from page 1 ically presented activities of the campus at large. on the printed Incidentally, if that article in urgency or concern about any- last 2 years, the position may be page. Copy will follow the vari- "The Moderator" has given you thing happening on campus. It even higher. ous campaigns. any doubts the YAFs don't worry, was argued that this feeling was Graduate deans, the Foundation Spaid calls the yearbox a com- (it starts out: "To find out Hotel more the result of the group dynamics Curtis Barber Shop says, are receiving a list of the plete departure from the tradi- about potential these potentates" of any newly initiated body, but designates' names, as well as those tional yearbook. Affirms Spaid: 1 referring to 'Ronnie' "read that nevertheless more attention South Gay St. receiving honorable mention, with "I never would have taken on; the and beware, for the author is did need to be paid to the collec- the recommendation that all are job if it was in a a Mount Vernon, Ohio traditional new left symp.") Lantz found tive needs and activities of fresh- "worthy of financial support in mold." the story "completely ludicrous." men outside of their classroom graduate school."