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2-11-1966

Kenyon Collegian - February 11, 1966

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Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - February 11, 1966" (1966). The Kenyon Collegian. 2223. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/2223

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]. HE KENYON COLLGIAN,G - ~- . A Journal of Student Op;nion - -faj -" , ' 4. ,,, ~·l \

~ XCII Gambier. ; February 11. 1966 No. 8. ALPHA SIGS GET COUNCIL'S NOD TURF-IN U. S. A. Ii'. 0\\ by David Hoster fIlph3 Sigma Chi was given the duty for preparing committee lists dent Council's stamp of ap- for a new council was taken from WET BLANKET TOSSED ON-tURF-IN: U\,a!in action taken at a meet- the elections committee and given As we went to preIS, we leo:rn- tel' weekend. The following is Sunday came under intense fire held last Monday. ed that the Campua Senate has an account of the Senate's discus. at the February 3 meeting of the to the executive committee. A instructed Dean Edwards to re- sion of that matter on February 3. Campus Senate. In other considerations, the move to require the council treas- quire the use of seats "such CD are The proposed, so-called "Turf- cndinarily provided in a regular THE DISCUSSION ORIGIN. UlIcilapproved a series of eight urer to make a financial report movie showing" in the 2 to 4 In", which is scheduled to height- ated when one member whose nstitutional amendments, elim- once a semester instead of upon movie on Sunday morning of win. en the 2-4 period of War Ball concern for the students' social ted the class office of secre- affairs is familial' to the entire request was changed to state that ..treasurer, and put the class community expressed his doubt ideot on the student council further reports could be required War Ball Now Snow Ball about the project. He declared I'oling members. on request of the council. What was once War Ball and dance will last from 10 to 2 "it is in peculiar contrast to all the other things we do." It was !tiE COUNCIL SUMMARILY IN AN AMENDMENT enacted now runs under the doveUke in the morning. unclear whether his reference was ssed eight amendments to the label of Winter Weekend (re- Sal:urday will be replete in the council meeting two weeks to the Campus Senate or the eel- [lStitution, recommended by the ago the class office of secretary- member Sonia Henie?) will with amusements, Aside from nning Committee, but ran into lege as a whole. t treasurer was eliminated. In a occupy the Hill next Friday some fraternity parties, there uble on a ninth. The disput- The "Turf-In", certainly a nove night and Saturday. amendment concerned the move to get more opinions on the will be a wrestling meet at el way of topping a dance week] blication of students' names on council and more authority for The Social Committee has the Wertheimer Fieldhouse at end, nevertheless has the looks of dicial Board public statements. the office, class presidents were prepared a full agenda of vig- 2:30 in the aHernoon, and. fol· a . large scale Inneundo. 1'bis is the wo:y it operates: after th, e Planning Committee amend- voted a place on the council. orous activity, to be clbecxed lowing that for couples in the ent would have eliminated the dance ends at 2:00 A.M. on Bunt by the mucb-wbtspered "Turf- mood for some vertical action tire practice of issuing state- In the same meeting, Jerry day, the Social Commlttee and the ents, but it was felt by several Reynolds addressed the council on In" on Sunday morning. Stu- - a basketball game against Air Force ROTC wU1 lnTite all embers that students needed to War Ball plans. Reynolds repre- dents Dlay purchase their Mt. Union at 4:00. weary couples to Roue HalL there oW about action taken by the sented the ROTC unit under tickets at the door of the . That nighl:, Little Anthony to s.prawl oYer the·floor and"wateh ard so that they could be more whose sponsorship the program is Dean's - office beginning next and the ImpeJ;ials will per- a honor movte prOCUl'ed by the being offered. Friday night a Film Society for the occasion. Ae_ are of rules and infractions. week or pay through the nose form in Peirce Hall. In a de- e council adopted a compro- dance will be held from 10 to 2 cording to respondbl. .ources. ise resolution proposed b y with the Roamers (formerly Terry al: the door for each event. A parture from past practice, no there will be a force of two cam- esident James Jarrett which re- and the Twilights) providing the ticket covering the entire beer will be served in the Hall pus security qua:rd& on duty plus ests the Judicial Board to re- rhythm. Saturday afternoon the weekend costs $5.00: those at that tfme. When the dance some alert students cbarqed with in from publishing the names Kenyon Basketball team will per- sold at the door Friday night ends, the (ha·ha) "Turf-In" barring illeqal holda. Coup1el; form for the benefit of anybody will be reminded that smoldJlq offenders. for that particular dance will will begin. The title of the interested, and that night a com- and drinkinc) are forbidden in The other amendments approv- parable group, Little Anthony cost $2.00: $4.50 wUl be charg- movie to be shown is as yet ROS5e Hall, a buildinq with the included action to change and the Imperials, will perform. ed for Saturday night's event. unannounced. but Bl11Schnall G"e-resistance of tent cloth. unci! representation to the Sen- After Tony's 10-2 show the big A group called "The Roam- of the Student Council Plan- ALTHOUGH THE SENATOR e, The current requirement performance will begin with a ers will perform Friday ning Comml.ttee has warned who raised questions about the Us for two members to sit on "turf-in" in Rosse Hall, where night. The group Is no stran- that, "as soon as the first per- Rosse Hall happening introduced senate, one of whom must be movies will be shown to a re- e president or the chairman of ger to Kenyon, having per· son lights a cigarette or takes himself as one "who is usually clining audience, but as Reynolds very free in these matters," he e Planning Committee. The ventured, the "big show will be formed at this time last year a gulp of beer, the movie wl11 emphasized that his objections remittee chairman requirement on the floor." under the name of "Terry go off and the lights will Rash as eliminated, and the word were based on his feeling that for and the TwUlghters:' The on:' ustchanged to should. The aug- (Continued on page 8) the college to sponsor such an ion that representatives to event cheapens the name of Ken- udent Council from fraternities yon. Then, honing his objections SAGA RIOT ROCKS HAMILTON down to a fine point, he said: "If officers in the fraternity was .- 'minated. The nwnber of sig- often thinks the Saga food service, which also the (ood service at the College. we are going to talk about Pub· lures on. a petition for a place of itself as unique in intel- caters to Kenyon. Following are lic Relations on this occasion, the "ESTIMATES of the damage expressed elimination of chairs a ballot was raised. In inde- lectual climate and attitude, excerpts of an account of the in~ cident as reported in the Hamil- cau:;ed· by the riot have been set for this event is open to question." ndent and class president elec- at over $200 by Robert Monroe, but strange parallels arise at ton Spectator: Another member of the Senate, ns the number of names is now director of Saga operations at similar institutions. "Freshmen and several inde- who is in a position which lends instead of 15, on campus-wide Hamilton (Saga Bob revisited?). ~tions the requirement is 40 Last month, for example, the pendents joined forces last Sun- its authority to such events, de- Monroe said that the cost was students of Hamilton College, a day evening in a food riot which fended the "Turf-In" on histori· stead of the previous 15. The 'about the same' as that of the Kenyon analogue located in Clin- rocked the Soper Hall of the Com~ cal precedent and personal self- food riot of March, 1963. FACULTV-STUDENTS ton, New York, expressed their mons. A week before the dis- confidence. "We've had these distaste for culinary preparation contented diners strewed the com- "Hadley S. DePuy. associate things in the past," he said, "and at the college by staging a food ROUP ON VIET-NAM mons floor with milk, assorted dean, summarized administrative 1 (~Co~n~ti~·n~u:"~~o~n~pn,::,.~.~8)c-__ riot. cold cuts, and broken china, ad- With the establishment of an reaction to the riot by saying Forum to Entertain CURIOUSLY, Hamilton's die· ministrative officials had already live study committee, the Viet Tuesday morning that 'no riot tary services are administered by intensified their efforts to improve am situation is finally a felt whatsoever can be justified. The Advocate of Viet War esence in the Gambier com- whole purpose of a liberal arts The Kenyon Student Forum's unity. LIBRARY FEATURES PHOTO SHOW college is to teach men how to lecture-discussion on the war in Starting Sunday, February 13, deal with their problems rational_ Vietnam, originally scheduled foc ORGANIZED WITH THE PUR- 1"1: the Robert Bowen Brown Gal- ly. This gross immaturity repre- February 14, was postponed until se of providing information on lery of the Chalmers Library will W sents what Cone would expect to February 28 by the Calendar e infinite convolutions of the ~"!!t host a one-man exhibit of photo- if find in a kindergarten.' Planning Committee because of a iel Namese War, the committee r;., graphs by John Webb, an em- ~"'~f§'. conflict with a Lectureship Com- elected Mr. Philip Church of "THE SUNDAY night supper, ployee of the Ohio mittee lecture scheduled on Feb- e English Department as spon- which has long been termed by Publications Office. students as 'The Food of the Week ruary 14. George A. Lipsky, not- r and Terry Robbins, a sopho- in Review', consisted of home- ed author and Professor of Po- re, as moderator of its meet. "THE PHOTOGRAPHS, made vegetable soup, french fried litical Science and Geography at gs. The activities of the com- taken in Southeastern Ohio potatoes, assorted cold cuts, and Wabash College, who had been ·ttee---which has yet to choose summer, represent an experience fruit and cookies. invited to give the introductory lo.rmalname-will include pub. in my life," says photographer speech, was notified of the change g several research papers Webb, who has a distant associa- ( "At about 6:10 p.m., freshmen by telephone on February 3 and the large, unanswered ques. tion with Kenyon by dint of ap~ at a table near the rear of the hall agreed to address the rescheduled Oils of Southeast Asian affairs. pearing in a film produced last grumbled to waiter Ron Carter: meeting. The format remains the t tbeir initial meeting early this summer which was directed by 'Are we on K rations tonight? same. The meeting will be held nth, the members of the com- Mr. Franklin Miller Ill, son of the This food isn't worth eating.' at 8;00 P.M. in Philomathesian ittee agreed not to assume a physics professor. Edward Heim- "At 6:17, as desert was being Hall. Dr. Lipsky will speak for an isan attitUde, but to act sol- erdinger, a senior, played a major served, all the lights in the build- hour, and an hour of discussion as a source of information role in the film, along with Mrs. ing went out. Headwaiter Alex will follow. d enlightenment. Marjorie Johnson, sometime lead- Cruden said later that he 'knew DR. LIPSKY, who received his ing lady in many Hill Theater immediately that it was a food ~de Mr. Church, other fac- A.B. from the University of dramatic productions. SNAPSHOOTER WEBB riot.' ty members are active on the Washington and his Ph.D. from lTUnittee;these include Mr. An- Mr. Webb took most of the the cast and crew as well as the "Monroe, who was in the kitch- the University of California., was lly Bing, Mr. Richard Hett- photographs included in the ex- places and people there. en at the time of the blackout, invited to speak at Kenyon at gel', the Rev. Donald Rogan, hibit while on location with the said that he realized that 'someone the . suggestion of two student. THE PHOTOGRAPHIC EX. . William McCulloh, and the film .in which he plays a small had gotten the key to the elec- who heard him speak at Low- hibit of 120 pictures, which is v. Richard Henshaw. role. He explains that his con· trical room where the main pow- ville, Kentucky, over the CbriIt. sponsored. by Mr. Fred Beasley of nection with the fUm was "a er switch is located,' and went mas holidays and thought that he COMMITTEE MEETS Athens, will close Saturday, Feb- 'rHE doubly unique situation," for he downstairs to turn the power would be able to present a mod- l::r Monday evening at 7:00 in ruary 26. According to sourees at back on. erate, reasoned viewpoint on an not only had the opportunity to Orth Ascension. The first of , Me. Miller's ftlm DURlNG the three to four min_ issue which has been too often be part of the picture but also an t research papers will be read will open in commercial theatres utes of darkness, 'food and plates discussed with unreasoned par.. the next meeting, February 14. excellent chance to photoeraph sometime late this spring. (Continued on page B) tisan emotionalism. PAGE TWO KENYON COLLEGIAN FEBRUARY t " he SOCIAL INCLINATIONS* The Kenyon Collegian NEW COURSE- "Oh, where have you been my litlle Doll?" A fortnightly Journal of Student Opinion "I've been to a Turf·In at Rosse Hall:' NEW PROFS "A WHAT. my sweel?" Anew, non-credit selTlin; Box 308 Gambier. Ohio 421-4911 "A Turf-In. Ma. U's neat. and two journeymen histo Everyone lies an Ihe Ooor! Groovyl Editor R. G. Freeman Faculty Adviser professors will take the' William McCulloh And then we see 0 horror .... movie!" places in the classroom settin AS$Ocioie Editor New in the annals of good clean fun is the "Turf-In", an during this semester. Floyd Linton indoor picnic-movie which will be held from 2-4 A.M. next THE NEW SEMINAR, found Manoqinq Ediior Sports Editor Sunday to celebrate the end of War Ball / Weekend. We ap- Ftichard Henry ~e Warren Diven and conducted by Professors A plaud the breathy ingenuity of the plan and challenge all par- ango, Clor, and Evans, repfesen Assisiants ticipants to recount the plot of the movie which the social a cooperation of disciplines _ p Charles Verral Advertisinq Manager Steve Bowers Dennis O'Connell committee plans to project on that mystic morning. We also litical Science, History, aJ1 Psychology. According to a prill praise Dean Edwards who, in his continuing campaign to en- ContribuJiDq Editors ed prospectus and syllabus avai Mark Savin, David Hoster, C. J. Taggart, Robert D. dow the student with blessed memories of undergraduate Lehmann. Barry Bergh, Dan Horowitz (Exchange), John able in the Registrar's Office,til Cocks, Ashby Denoon, Carl Mankowitz, Sergeant Barry recreation, has condoned, nay, encouraged this new type of "chief task of the seminar will Sadler. Gambier gambol. to gain various perspectives 0 Siaff: Freud's Psychology, Sartre's ~ Thomas Au, Tom Lane, Phil Sharp, John Smyth, Howard We also chide those who feel that this phase of Winter istentialjsm, Croce's Idealism, an Basel., Andy Crane, Richard Schmidt, Carl Thayler, Fred Weekend is potentially lethal, in that, should word of it spread the Pragmatism of Dewey, and( Waitzkin. Artur Kosiakowski, Dick Hikock, Perry Smith. to neighboring colleges, Kenyon will be blacklisted by all on evaluate their impact on lhi Pholoqraphy: counts of moral turfitude. Such fears are obviously ground- century." Michael Abramson, Fred Scholz, Robert Schonfeld Speaking for the seminar less. This is the age of expanding women's hours, a length- Busines$ Manaqer Circulation: tripartite cerebral battery, M Wayne Beveridge Alan Ryan ening of men's visiting privileges. Kenyon's implementation Michael Evans of the history d "The last thing I think of myself as being 18 naive," of the proneducational movie will raise no eyebrows.-R.G.F. partment said, "OW' concern is -Unidentified Administrative Figure • A humorous editorial. -R.D.L. ~a~ about these men as hurnal isuc scholars ... and to discu. '-- 1 their views of society, man, OJ: history." Mr. Evans said that th SENATE TAKES VACATIONS; course readings will deal wi On Vacations & Education "general problems" rather th.; Someone remarked last week that study is a student's pro- CONSIDERS CHRISTMAS concentrate on "an explicit hi tory of details;' fession and that like the dutiful office-worker, he should put The major portion of the Campus Senate meeting of February 3 ASKED WHAT MOTIVAt in as much time as possible in hs place of business. The argu- was consumed with talk of vacations, class attendance, and the rules of behavior. the wee in constructing the ne ment would seem to invalidate any claims the student may seminar, which will meet for ap have to vacation time, but whoever made the remark took AFTER BRIEF DISCUSSION •. --o===:-C~-:-=C:-::==--:-:::::_-:- proximately three hours one Men ANOTHER FACULTY MEM_ little note of the student's special circumstance: study is an the Senate passed a preliminary day evening each month, III ber of the Senate doubted this Evans said, "We feel that sever occupation more rigid than employed labor; the classroom resolution allowing women to en- proposal, observing that, due to routine is more confining and the rewards are infinitely har- different perspectives can tel' dormitories at 10:00 A.M. on the fact that exams were admin- brought to bear by people spea der to come by, for they are self-rendered. And there are fur- Saturday and Sunday of the three istered before the vacation and ing from different disciplines," ther, subjective difficulties, not the least of which is the seper- major dance weekends. The reso- the student spent 4 weeks of The prospectus emphasizes..!h study-free relxation, "the morale atlon from communal security which the college student-es- lution passed, however, not with- enrollment in the seminar will at this time of the year is the pecially the Kenyon student-has to endure. Our parties- out weak opposition from one limited to a dozen and will highest I've ever seen it." filled on a selective basis. Alli those sweaty, swift, banal repititions-provide no lasting com- quarter. A member of the Sen- After further discussion, the terested are urged to sign-up wi pensation for the loss of a situation in which the student can ate pointed to the possible dam- Senate agreed that, however va- the Registrar. move with interest and excitement. Only our education has age that could be done to the Col- cations are managed, there re- IN ANOTHER DEVELOPMEN the potential of serving this need. lege's image if parties were held mains on extra week which could in the growth of learning locall be applied to any activity-va- THE CURRENT IMBROGLIO over vacations has produced coincident with church services two history professors have bee cation, reading week, etc. Perhaps procured from Denison Unive a facinating alternative to the dreary swamp of classes to on Sunday morning. He was the most inspired suggestion came sity. The two-Wyndham which we must return after our mid-winter bout of relaxation. then informed by a Senator con- from the administration figure Southgate and David S. Watson Dean Haywood has responded to the students' request for an nected with the Church that this who had earlier dismissed the have signed to teach for this alteration of the present schedule to create 3 weeks of Spring view conflicted with the college's students' preference as untenable. mester only. Both carry distil vacation and 3 weeks of Winter vacation by pointing to the policy emphasizing voluntary ex- He felt that the surplus period guished records. Professor Sou might well be used as a time for gate, an undergraduate and gra unfeasibility of any proposed change. Should we add a week ercise of a student's religious be- special study and discussion uate alumnus of Harvard Ijnive liefs. He qualified, though, by to Spring vacation, he says, there would be no possibility of wherein all disciplines represent- sity, is the author of John Jew a reading week preceding semester exams in the Winter- saying that he speaks from the ed in the college would contribute and the Problem of something that students who had to undergo upwards of two standpoint of public relations a- toward the examination of a Authority. He has written ~ finals last semester desire intensely. Furthermore, the Dean lone. His efforts failed, for the single topic. A student Senator lifically for all the best trade ~ praised the suggestion, saying that revealed that the faculty, already cheated out a week of resolution passed by a heavy fa- odicals. Professor Watson, w this kind of educational experi- trained at the University of C votable vote. classes to make room for finals period, refuses to allow any ence would free the student of cage, is a specialist in the field further reduction of class hours from the customary 42. This The issue of vacations produced the belief that all education lies in modern British history and EUJ' stinginess on the part of the faculty seems to confirm Profes- a debate that was, unusually, as the classroom. It was pointed out pean intellectual history. He sor Charles Muscatine's observation that "No one can be that several colleges have experi- presently at work on a paper fo productive as it was prolix. After mented successfully with tran- more conservative than a professor when it comes to educa- being informed that the students' the Council for the Study ofMal sition periods of this type, Stam- kind entitled "The Concept tional reform." preference is a wee week winter ford and Ohio's Mankind in the Rennaissance ar Given that alleged attitude, no one can be sure how the vacation preceded by a reading among them. Enlightenment Thought. faculty will react to the Dean's recommendation that we use period and a three week spring the surplus week as a special study period, in which the entire vacation, an administration fig- Announcement HINDUISM NEXT ON TOUI campus will be given a single book to discuss or a single ure spoke on the difficulties _of In response to many topics to examine in a series of seminars and meetings. We such an arrangement, He said questions we have received OF RESURGENT RELIGION! feel that this is the most exciting proposal to originate at Ken- that the proposal is "nearly im- The Kenyon Christian Fello~ from our readers. the next yon in quite some while. Such a "Think Week" would relive possible if we are to accomodate ship has begun a series of leclUJ' the student of the tiresome notion that all education can be all faculty and students." He con- issue of the Collegian will on "Resurgent Religions" withtil tinued, pointing out that the rae- contain a thoroughly re- poised, witty presentation ofPI found in the classroom. The idea is not new. It was this type ulty is adamantly against any searched critique of the col- Ieesor A. Denis Baly in the 10Ulll of generalized study that motivated Alexander Meiklejohn's system that would shorten the ex- of Peirce Hall last month. lege Iudicial Board. its rec- Experimental College in Wisconsin. And today at Berkeley, isting requirement of 42 classes IN THE NEXT THRt ord, practices, policies. and 150 students study in a special program which devotes one per semester. Noting that "a months, the Fellowship will f three week break in the middle the concepts on which it semester to th e Age of Pericles and another to a similar, ture speakers who will enlarge of the semester would be to dis- was founded, the religions that Mr. Baly ci general topic. These students are permitted to write papers ruptive," he conceded that the as resurgent. On February about anything that interests them which relates in some way present system cheats the student Since we desire a telling Professor James Norton of th to the wide area of study. Ten years ago such a program of a reading period and may have expression of student opin- will deliver would have been impossible, given the conscious immaturity contributed to the poor perfonn- ion on this matter. we in- address on Buddhism. The f~ of college student at that time. Now, however, the college ance of some students in semester vite all students and faculty lowing week, the Reverend Cant exams. He then gave the adminis- A. K. Cragg, Visiting Professor student moves on a new level of maturity which should be tration's alternative, which calls with valuable views on the the Union Theological se~_~ operations of the board to presupposed before one renews faith in the present, rigid sys- for using the fow·th week of va- in New York will treat Is.... tem of education which is based on an antiquated principle of cation as an optional reading submit letters articulatinq And the last of the resurgents- authority. Witness the students' interest in educational re-,w=eeok='oOo"oOoWo'od=b=Y='oXo'""=o-===,their opinions to the editor. Hinduism-will be the topic form which provoked the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley. Ii Names will be withheld on Professor Ediriweera SarachchaJ Mr. HaYW~:lOd'ssuggestion is creditable because it contradicts CURTIS HOTEL request. though we should dra of the University of C;~ who is a visiting Lecturer at J-'~ hope that several prominent the authority principle and encourages the student's intel. BARBER SHOP ioon University. He will spel lectual responsibility. We would hope to see the program en- figures in the college com- Bud· Hank - Charlie on April 10. acted under any new semester arrangement that the admin- munity will speak their Each of these meetings will. On the Square, Mt. Vernon mind. istration seeks to introduce. -R. G. F. ''-- -1,1- --' followed by an informal reC€PtlO at the Chaplain's howe. pRUARY II, 1966 KENYON COLLEGIAN PAGE THREE

TTERS: VIET NAM COMMITTEE STATES GOALS VIET NAM LETTER have been the draft card burnings erable degree of political com- could perform a valuable service. fuL At least in that case, some and other newsworthy demon- placency at this college which Therefore we are planning to. pub- people will have read enough and lhe ColIeqkm: strations. Regrettably, although is severe enough to have caused lish short factual papers on the will care enough to make their Thoughthe extent ?f th~ United there is interest and although a plea from the editorial writers sort of fundamental questions own decisions about U. S. policy res' involvement l.n VIet Nam there is an attempt to be familiar of the Collegian for more politi- that are glossed over in the con- in Viet Nam. ~ been steadily increasing, with our present South East cal interest at all levels. It is temporary and often speculative Respectfully, 're has been a noticeable lag in Asian problem, there is no con- unfortunate that those who should discussions which are common at The Committee on the e public awareness of the na- venient source of information be closest to the Viet Namese this time. War in Viet Nam: re of our presence there. In about the question most people problem both by their education WE MUST INSIST that while M1<:h".l AbrlmQO" e past, the split in opinion ask. Who is Ho Chi Minh? Who and by their potential participa- each member of the committee C.orqe Berndt are the Viet Cong? Other than tion, find themselves uninterested A.. tbollY BiIlq out the war has been character- has his own opinion about the in- St.ph ... Bowen as a battle between Hawks being the supposed "bad guys" or unable to find the answers to volvement in Viet Nam, the com- PtlUlp Chureb Joh .. Cocb Doves,as if it were some div- few can readily say. This can their questions. ittee itself is neither pro nor con. Tom Doep]wll Richlll"d Fr .. ma:JII ling avian "dog-fight" with be understood in the population This situation has prompted We wish only to provide the am- Marlorl. H.IlAh .... as a whole, but at a college----this Richard Henah .... ch trying to pluck a ribbon twenty-five members of the fac- munition for both sides; to edu- Rlcbard H.ttllIlq.r m the other's tail. It has taken coljege-c-it is inexcusable. ulty and student body to form the cate, not indoctrinate. When suf- Artur Kos1clkowwld Stevell LlIIldam_ long time for the controversy Committee on the War in Viet ficient information has been gath- Rlchar

106 Points! HOOPSTERS CHASE CONFERENCE -- SET RECORDS The Kenyon Lords, fresh from a vigorous contest with many minor violations and turn-. Denison last night, will face a tough Mt. Union squad at the overs, Kenyon just kept pace Wertheimer Fieldhouse tomorrow night. A large crowd is with the Bloodsuckers in the first half. After exchanging the lead expected, and not surprisingly, for the team has now more many times, Kenyon took the lead than doubled its victory total of last year, and has dazzled 30-28 on a jumper by Gene Har- the Ohio Conference in the process. ley. Following baskets by John --~:-c--~ Dunlop and "Dank" Parmalee LAST SATURDAY NIGHT. for ally inadmissible in team sports, gave the Lords a halftime advan- example, the Lords joined the ex- one reason for our loss to this tage of 40-36. clusive clutch of OC powers who northern Ohio team may have been the absence from the line-up Several ties highlighted the have surpassed the centur-y mark of sophomore Terry Parmalee. It second half, as Whitson, Atkinson, with their 106-86 win over Centre was clear that the sharpshooting and Schell all turned on for 'rran , College in a game held at Ohio forward was the subject of a dis- sylvania. Harley connected on Wesleyan. The chief contribu- ciplinary measure resulting from rapid baskets to score most of his tors to the tally, which broke the a situation which Coach Bob Har- 13 points here and Dunlop con- rison characterized as "a family verted several one-and-one plays week-long Kenyon record of 98 affair." The Coach gave assur- to keep the Lords narrowly ahead. set against Wabash the previous ances that Parmalee will play in With 1:50 remaining and the score Saturday, were John Dunlop with all of the rernainmg games. tied at 76-76 Dunlop completed 36, Terry Parmalee with 20, Dick a 3-point play on a beatiful drive. HARRISON HAD FURTHER Fox with 17, and Kit Marty with After Dick Fox added a tip-in, words about the Wittenberg game, Dunlop showed his defensive met- 12. This was the first time this saying that "John Dunlop was not tle by snuffing an opposing play year that the team boasted more mentally ready for this game." and winning the resulting jump than two men in the double fig- Dunlop hit only 3 of 13 field goal for possession. The play went ure column. attempts, but remained our high to diminuittve Don Swartz, who scorer with 11 points. As a team, already stationed himself down In the earlier record-setting the Lords hit on 17 of 69 field court and had no trouble making performance, which took place on -toal attempts for a paltry per- the basket. With the score 83-80 January 29, the Lords began to centage of .246. "We had too Dunlop sunk two free throws and many turnovers in the Wabash look more like a team while they Marty eased in a jump shot to in- game", said Harrison, "We would sure the victory. pasted the Wabash Little Giants just throw the ball away. Heck, 98-79, An extra burst of speed we only had five turnovers in the ONE MEASURE of the team's was added to the backcourt game Wabash game and look what hap- balanced performance in this with the return of Captain Gene pened." game was their field goal percent. Harley, who managed to decoy age, which stood at 50% with 28 Harrison attributes our occa- successful attempts out of 53. HARLEY - BACK IN ACTION - HITS the opposing defense away from sionally erratic performance to John Dunlop, thus enabling the which he feels will diminish as Coshocton ace to score on many MIAMI SHADES LORDS' DAMP MEN they weather a few more years '-E;;'!""4B occasions. Harley also did his of Ohio Conference competition. Miami swimmers beat the Lords had to win a bare majority of the ;' hi>' share, sinking two field goals and He is, however, pleased with the by three strokes in a meet in remaining points. Lord swim- two free throws in the first half, the freshman improvements. John which four new records were set, mers Ted Arnold and Jack Craw- which ended with Kenyon ahead Dunlop had never brought the and an old record tied. ford lost the butterfly and back- 51-33. ball up against the press before MIAMI GOT OFF to a strong stroke events to the same Miami lead, easily copping the medley mermen Russell and Anderson, THE SECOND HALF was coming to college. Ed Shook has relay, showing definite superiority who had beaten them in those marked by the fierce shooting of made the transition from high in the backstroke and butterfly legs of the medley relay. But Lar- TelTY Parmalee, who is from school forward to a college guard. legs of that event. Miami's Goble ry Witner swam to a new record Solon, and not Parma, Ohio, as Lar-r-y Finstrorn. who had diffi- touched out Kenyon's All Ameri- in the 100 free, covering the four erroneously reported in the last culty with his defensive game at can Larry Witner in the 200 yard laps in 50.6 seconds and besting CQlleqian. Though wabssn closed the beginning of the season, has freestyle, while a first was a. Dave Evans old mark. Freshman Kenyon's point plurality to 10, now learned to play man-to-man, warded to Miami's Gray in a near Paul McCormick lost the arduous Par-malee bailed the locals out and Kit Marty and Don "Chip- photo finish in the 50 yard sprint. 500 yard, 20 laps event to Goble of and stretched the score to 80-64. munk" Swartz have overcome The home team trailing by 13 Miami, whose time of 5:21.4 es- Confident of victory, Coach Har- their earlier nervousness and now points, the Lord's sophomore tabljshed a new pool record. rison pulled out his starters with play like local playground demi- Doug Hutchinson swam strong KENYON TRAILED by .. 13 2 minutes to go in the game and gods-fast, confident, heroic. fielded an all-freshman contin- butterfly and backstroke legs to points, and needed a one-two vic- THE TEAM'S NEW·FOUND gent, which proceeded to break win the individual medley, shat- tory in the penultimate event, the perfection was demonstrated in a 'r-year record by one point on tering former Kenyon star Phil 200 yard breaststroke to keep her their most evenly-calibrated game Mayher's old record, with a time victory hopes alive. Kenyon stars Steve Ryan's lay-up in the last F1NSTROM DUNKS ON yet, against a tough Transylvania of 2:10.3. Ted Arnold took a Jay Moore and Greg Kalmbach seconds. quintet on February 4. The ex- third in that event. stayed even with the Miami mer- son, Evans, and McCormick co The less said the better about citing 86-82 victory was the pro- FRESHMEN GREG OFFEN. men for five lengths, then sprint- not best the Miami foursome the Wittenberg debacle on Jan- duct of much carefully orchestra- burger and Mark Rayman showed ed home for the crucial points, the final free style relay. uary 31. Though alibis are usu- ted teamwork. Hampered by marked improvement in the low showing Miami their heels. • • • board diving, placing first and Moore's clocking of 2:29.2 tied Jim Tomorrow the Lord wat third, with Offenburger's point Young's dual meet record set two boys meet Wittenberg in total a respectable 143.4. years ago, meet the outcome of Kenyon trailed by 7 points at The highly partisan crowd wlrl this point in the meet. Assuming tasted victory. But Kenyon's four could well portend the 0 a win in the free style relay, she best freestylers, Witner, Hutchin- Conference Championship. Kenyon Track Falls In 3- Way Meet Last Saturday the Kenyon track team was host to Ohio Wesleyan and Musldngum, placing third in a final score of 57\02-52-441h. The Lords won five first places, but a lack of depth cost valuable points. Art Hensley won the High jump, and Charles Find- ley won the 600 with a time of 1:17:3. Jeff Kelleher took the 440 with a 53:3, and freshman Bruce Beck broke Kenyon's 'varsity mile record with a time of 4:32;1. Kenyon's mile relay team won with a time of 3:39. Coach White was pleas- ed with the high number of first place finishers, and noted that Kenyon will be able to SPORTS PHOTOS score much higher when ath- letes such as pole vaulter BY Dave Yamauchi recovers from HARD TO CATCH-THOSE LORDS ROBERT SCHONFELD injuries and sickness. RUARY II. 1966 KE~YON COLLEGIAN PAGE SEVEN ioana: Politicos KNOX COUNTY SPAWNS POLITICAL FIGURES by C, Johnson Taggart by C. Johnson Tagqart well find Secrest's seniority and ount Vernon's versatile William L. White, who de- The reapportionment of Ohio's congressional districts, standing with the majority party jes himself as "specialist, lecturer, hobbyist". hopes to which becomes effective this year, places within the Seven- tempting. And Secrest has shown "Governor" to the list, and is challenging James A. teenth District the homes of two incumbent Congressmen- his ability in past elections to win es for that office in the Republican primary May 5. one a seasoned professional, the other a highly controversial heavily, even in normally Repub- lican areas. ~essin that, and in the general election November 8 would relative newcomer. In a fight to the finish for their respec- I~:.:..::..:::.:..::.:..: _ he climax of a long and various career for this Irrepres- tive political lives are Democrat Robert T. Secrest of Cald- e mechanical, electrical, and safety engineer, inventor of well, a fonner Federal Trade Commissioner, trying for his WRESTLERS HOLD selective tabulating SYstem for typewriters and of "WeeM thirteenth term, and Republican John Ashbrook of J ohns- town, an outspoken Goldwater conservative and target of con- POOR RECORD Nip" (a poison for boll weevils), owner of the nation's In three recent meets, the Ken- est Angora rabbitry, and founder of the American Buai- certed liberal efforts to defeat him, trying for his fourth term. yon wrestling team defeated Ot Club, whose 35 "hobbies for education, pleasure, and terbcin 23-19 and lost to Mt SECREST, a New Deal veteran 1964 and the Voting Rights Act fit" range from "helping old-age pensioners", "teaching Union and Heidelberg. with the oratorical style of Huey of 1965--in each case casting the day School class", and "toys for Kiddies" To "meeting THE MT. UNION MEET Long, graduated from Muskingum only negative vote in Ohio's 15_ January 26, was dominated by a talking with people", "taking pictures", and "collecting College and Washington College man delegation. He is the rank- strong squad which pinned four ks from prominent dead men's graves." ing Republican on the House of Law, was a high school prin- Kenyon opponents. Gary Nave Committee on Un-American Ac------.,------cipal and school superintendent at 152, Jim Kersey at 167, John NATIVEOF ALABAMA, Mr the fired employee with his ow». tivities, and recently won brief Lowey at 177 and Ed Gaines, te earned three degrees from men. He claims that Governor with experience in the Ohio nationwide acclaim for his harsh House of Representatives before heavyweight, were pinned for a ama Polytechnic Institute Rhodes "has no more to do with cross-examination and denuncia- being elected to the Federal loss of 20 points. Defeated on Auburn University) before creating jobs than Donald Duck" tion of Robert Shelton, Imperial House for the first time in 1930. points were Nonn Hattzel, 130, -that Rhodes's travels and adver- Wizard of the United Klans of Barry Burkhardt, 145, Ed Lentz, dinghis "imagineering" bust- He served five terms and part of a tisements have not brought new Amerlca, who appeared before wrestling in the 191 lb. weight in 1914. His principal con- business to Ohio, that Ohio's great sixth before resigning in 1942 to HUAC last spring and refused to join the Navy. When the war class. Kenyon points were total- hasbeen the supervision of economic growth rate is the result tell them anything except his ed by Bob Leighton, 123,and Rick constructionof power plants, of the great prosperity of the na- ended, he returned to Caldwell name and address, citing the first, and was again elected to Congress Grieser, 137, who pinned their lng systems, and bridges, but tion as a whole, and that Rhodes fourth, Ilith, and fourteenth a· opponents and Mark Hanlon, 160, in 1948 and relected in 1950 and mandments. oundtime to invent the selec- is "wasting money joy riding." He 1952. In 1953,he again cut short who beat his man 5·2. Coach charges that Rhodes weakened Watts feels that the loss was due, tabulatingsystem (the patent the Ohio Republican party by re- his term when President Elsen- SECREST IS NEITHER a strict hewer appointed him to a seven- liberal nor a Johnson yes-man. in part, to the absence of the m- whichhe sold to Underwood) fusing to support the national jured Bill Judson. to raise Angora rabbits, or- party ticket in 1964. But, when year term on the bipartisan Fed- ConqressionaI Quarterly lists him eral Trade Corrunission. When as voting with the Johnson Ad- The Lords first win of the sea- allyas a hobby and education- asked if he would support Rhodes his term on the Commission ex- minstration 69% of the time and son came with the victory over enture for his son, Bill Jr., if the latter should defeat him in pired, he won reelection to Con- against them 27%. On the eleven Otterbein on February 2. The an attorney. He moved to the primary, White replied, "That gress in 1960 and again in 1962 test bills, he voted for Federal Otters were at an immediate dis- t depends." and added a further advantage as they were unable oin 1930and settled in MOWl charge that the Republican State and 1964. In 1964,he won 66.3% action nine times and against Fed- to place wrestlers in the 123, 137 onin 1959"because it was a Committee's recent recommenda- of the vote in his four-county eral action twice. district surrounding Zanesville, and 160 weight classes. Thus town." tion of Rhodes's reelection "vio- Both Ashbook and Secrest have running ahead of President John- they forfeited 15 points. The re- lates the spirit of the primary demonstrated considerable ability r. Whitefirst became a pcliti- son. maining Kenyon points were won and has every earmark of dicta- to win-c-Secrest by being elected person when he helped to by Hartzel who pinned his oppo- torship ... and sows seeds of dis- ASHBROOK, a graduate of twelve times and by winning after nent and by Hanlon who defeated d the Ohio Conservation Con- harmony in the party." Harvard and Ohio State Law his constituents have had long his man on points, 4-2. s, which, he claims, was "in- School, served in the Navy dur- periods of time to forget about THE OTTERBEIN SQUAD ntial in getting the Natural PRIMARY DEFEATS of incum; ing World War II, and was a prac- him, Ashbrook by winning reetec- was strong in the upper weight curces Department establish- bent governors are by no means ticing lawyer and publisher of the tion in the midst of a Democratic classes which included a 330 lb. impossible. In 1962, New Hamp- weekly Johnstown Independent landslide. Ashbrook has the ad- heavyweight who defeated Ed d much needed conservation shire's presidentially ambitious before he was elected to Congress vantage of knowing the territory Gaines, 5-0. Gaines, attempting S enacted, which included the Republican Governor Wesley in 1960. It was by fewer than and being known in it; most of to take down the wrestler. was water pollution law." His Powell lost the primary to John 4,400 votes that he won his pres- the present Seventeenth District immediately discouraged by electiveattempt was in 1964 Pillsbury, and in 1964 Maesachu- ent term in 1964, but it must be was included in the old Seven- Coach Watts, who advised: "Get n he unsuccessfully opposed setts's Democratic Governor EndiM remembered that that was a bad tenth District which elected Ash- out of there, you knucklehead!" cott Peabody was upset by his year for all Republicans, especial- brook in 1964, while Secrest is er Bolton for the Republican own Lieutenant Governor, Fran- Other Otter victories came with ly those with Ashbrook's convtc- losing the greater part of his decisions over Burkhardt and ation for Representative-at- cis X. Belloti. But in each case tions, and that President Johnson former constituents. Ashbrook Nave and pins on Keresy and e. "I was running against a the primary winner was defeated carried Ashbook's district. will also have working for him Lowey. innalre," he says. "I only in the general election; New Ashbrook's conservatism i s the highly successful and efficient The Lords, again hampered by t $368 and he spent of $20.- Hampshire elected its first Demo, welt-known. On the 52 key ad- Ohio Republican organization weakness in the upper weight " By accepting invitations to crane governor in 40 years. and ministration bills selected by Con. which during the past 18 years classes, suffered a loss at the Massachusetts elected a Republi- qressional Quarterly for 1964, he has suffered major setbacks only ublican dinners and meetings can governor while giving the hands of Heidelberg on February voted with the administration in 1958 (when the "Right-to- 5. Immediate victories in the overthe state, most of which Democratic candidates for the only 15% of the time. On the II Work" issue was hot in Ohio) and tondidnot attend, White man- Presidency and the Senate seven. lower weight groups netted the bil.ls selected by the Quarterly to 1964(the Goldwater debacle). But Kenyon team its only points. to make himself familiar to to-one majorities. William L. determine attitude toward feder- the Seventeenth District might ugh people that he received White's chances of becoming George Johnston, 123, won on a al involvement, he voted against reversal with 4S seconds left in 598 votes-impressive for a Governor of Ohio are slim indeed, federal involvement every time. itlcal newcomer. but that does not stop him. the match. Hartzel, 130, domino He opposed the Civil Rights Act of ating his match, pinned his man SACANDIDATEFORGOV_1 ======; at 2:57 in the second period. Rick or,Mr. White proposes a high-1 Look for new evening Grieser, wrestling at 137. pinned safety program to "get the his man also. Pete Sieble, 147, ks and punks off the high. HARRISONIANA although defeated, put up an ," improvement of mental Eppa Rixey, Bill Veeck, Jeff Slade of course, - but someone hours at the excellent and exciting fight. Nave, lutions, and matching funds at Kenyon in Ripley's Believe It or Not?? A hint might be 139 152, and Keresy, 160. and Lowey, eOtmnunitiesto build recrea- points (his team's scoring total) in high school .... , fiery full- 191, were pinned. Mark Hanlon !.'entersfor young people. The blooded American Indian . Bob Harrison. seemed completely off form dur- hwayprogram would include ing the first two periods, as his ling of licensed drivers every BEFORE COMING TO KENYON, the colorful basketball men- V.I. opponent scored eight points. .years (coupled with required tor attained most of the glory and kudos of the game as a player . Towards the end of the third peri. al examinations) cracking His 59 field goals and 139points in a single game. for example, still od he took down his man and was ;n on "slowpokes and Sunday appear to be national scholastic records. In the Big Ten Michigan, es" (sic), and an education Harrison never again reached the mythical millenium of 100 ':::======~r I out,driVingthusforlosingthe pin8~3.whenMiketimeBrown,ran gram in highway safety. He points (a la Bevo Francis of Rio Grande). He did manage, how~ 177.feU victim to a reversal in the ,rns that Lima State Hospital, ever, with his rugged and aggressive all around play to become second period of his match and chhe visited last year, needs All-Conference and AU-American in 1948and 1949. In his Junior was unable to recover in the re- ew addition for teenagers and year (1948) he captained a Big Ten champion team that lost to Bob HOTEL CURTIS maining time. Brown lost 2.1. t other mental institu'tions Cousy and Holly Cross in the NCAA quarterMfinals. The heavyweight match was conM been allowed "to go down "n- Drafted by Minneapolis, Harrison played the role of an outside ceeded to Heidelberg, giving them '>.t:I.:reationcenters are need- a winning 29 points to Kenyon's .Whitesaid, speaking from ex- Jim Luscatoff (e.g., hatchet man) on four Laker world champion- 'on tbe Iquare' ships in five years from 1949to 1954. By 1954the Mikan, Pollard, 13. ~ceas a former Scoutmaster, INJURIES AND A LACK OF VOlunteer, and father of et al combination was breaking up and Harrison was traded to St. Louis. With Bob Petit, he managed to play on still another NBA wrestlers in the upper weight .' to reduce juvenile crime, classes are problems that continue c~Wasthe cause of 81,000 arM championship team. Harrison completed his nine year pro career Mouat Veraoa with the Syracuse Nationals from 1956-1958,coming to Kenyon to plague the team. Blll Judson In Ohio last year. after his final season. is still out with a separation of ~ White charges that Gover- the ribs from the sternum, Bob hOdes's"false-austerity pro- WHEN PRESSED DURING an interview about "the best play~ Gladstone is sufl'ering from water and ruthless firing of dedi- ers, etc.", Harrison attempted to shift the discussion to the of- on the knee and Ed Gaines has state employees was just fense to be used against Mt. Union. Finally, however, after noting WILLIAMS flOWER SHOP injUred his shoulder. Kenyon forM 'Iierscheme to further his own the myriad of inherent dangers in such statements, he suggested feited. the heavyweight match to Cousy as the best he faced in college. Mikan as the best he played 114 South Main Stteet lIncal ambition," although he Heidelberg due to the abeenee of Next tu thc AkO\'e o~ble to say on his own in the pros, and the Shannan-Cousy duo as the toughest faced in Gains. the pros. _ by Chuck Kenrick ty that Rhodes replaced :>92.2086 6 Th team record now stands at IL '~'_2._2~07_.....!ll.4-0. PAGE EIGKf KENYON COLLEGIAN f'EBRUARY II,, O'BRIEN PROMISES FRESH APPROACI Appleseed Committee Upholds Flora IN REVEILLE - SUPPLEMENT PT!oIUU1 by John Smyth dent's bouse, and along 229 as It LAST FALL. SEVERAL FAC. REVEILLE, 1966 will wear supplement, which can be .. climbs ~e,hIlL ulty members became upset at the an entirely new face. A radf- into the main RneWe_ ~ "Only if everyone becomes The administration showed its lack of trees near 229 where it climbs the hill, and formed an cal change in the hardbound enlly, will contain events near Interested in this problem and increased concern for the appear- end of school, graduation, 8p informal committee to investigate ance of the campus when it re- book of memories is forecast sports, and spring danCt'. s .willing to contribute time such matters. Mr. Arango is moved the dormitory parking lots by ReveLD. editor Mike O'- main body of the book Will and effort, will the college's last (all. Last year the mainten- chairman, and some of the first members include Mr. Burns, Mr. Brien. O'Brien is laying heavy available to students before1 sylvan and bucolic atmosphere ance department expanded its op- Roelofs, Mr. Page, Mrs. Lendrim, emphasis on photography and 15. be preserved." These words eration of grass fertilizing and re, seeding, and began to feed trees and Mr. and Mrs. Warner. The keeping copy to a minimum. O'Brien stated further that of Walter Butt, co-chairman Appleseed committee plans to year's Reveille is to be cons' for the first time. Mr. Roberts THE MAJOR INNOVATION in. of &tl,ldent Council's newborn work with the faculty committee ably more artistic in its' Use has: in mind several projects for form in the upcoming R....eilla Johnny Appleseed committee, in investigating improvements photography. Layout desi planting bushes, grass and vines, will be chronological organization. and making recommendations to Pat Scarlett is emphaSiz.in~ express 'the sentiments of stu- and fie hopes that more money The old, traditional division into sh the administration. The commit- contrast between black and Vi' dents, faculty and administra- from the new budget will allow class pictures, activities, sports tees will also work with Mrs. in an effort to avoid a "was] tion in a new movement for him to carry them out. Mr. Rob- and fraternities will be done away Lund, who manages the garden out" gap appearance. Whiteis the preservation and improve- erts feels that, "Improving the with. Using informal. black and next to the theater and several just empty space, but will f looks of the campus will be one white photos, the album will be ment of Kenyon's flora. parts of the campus. Co-chair- tion organically in the layout. of the .top priorities this year." divided into three sections. man John Stewart suggested that Fall. only verbiage is to be an uno~ THE STUDENT CRUSADE. In the last few years the budget Winter, and Spring. Activities the committees may also get aid stve essay from beginning 10 said to have been originated in for the maitenance of the grounds will be recorded as they happen, from the special projects fund, which will help tie the photos Old Kenyon by Turner Straeffer, has been raised about 60%, and beginning with the coming of the the Self-Help program, and theU. gether. came to a violent climax when it the campus has become increas- freshmen, and concluding with S. Department of Agriculture. Al- With the heavy emphasis was introduced to council by Mr. ingly well-groomed. But Mr. graduation. though the Applessed movement photography, the ReTeille hag Butt. There was a high-strung, Roberts and Mr. Lord, the busi- O'Brien (eels that this album may never exactly sweep the up a considerable expense in two-minute debate, after which ness manager, agree that there continues the progress made in campus as a popular revolution, and equipment. O'Brien ~ council unanimously voted to in- has been little effort in the last recent years by the Reveille. Un- the community now recognizes that Retv.llle photographers K stall John Stewart and Mr. Butt few years to make actual changes til three years ago the Rrt'e'UIe the need for conscious effort to Lorenz, Yale Greenfield, Ric as co-chairmen of aJohnny Apple- in the grounds, if one expects the was nothing more than a catalog maintain and enhance Kenyon's Stickel and several others h seed committee formed to Inves- parking lot removal. The admin- of names, faces, and events, with natural beauty. take some 3,000 pictures to tigate ways of preserving Ken- istration has come to recognize few candid shots and practically point, of which 300 will proha yon's natural beauty and to pro- the deficiency and hopes to find no imagination. The Schofield be used. Added to the eKp€ mote awarness of the problem. money in the new budget for hir- SAGA RIOT Reveille of 1964 was the first in of putting out a better book, The Appleseed committee, how- ing a horticulture expert to ad- recent years to show imagination. (Continuedfrom paq. 1) year's staff inherited a $900 ever, represents something other vise on improvements and long- The book was well organized, cit from the 1965 Rnellle w than a league of flower-minded range planning. Mr. Lord noted were t1.ying all over the place,' with a great number of informal had to be paid. The student co ndividuals wishing to develop that the school will soon be get- according to waiter Steve Potter. photos, and included a school cil appropriation falls about Gambier into a cradle of natural ting money from a special endow- Many freshmen rushed towards history, the Dusty Path, which short of the expected _expe harmony and aesthetic virtue ment to improve the grounds, and the exits to escape the air-borne is still in demand. Last year's with the intention that the d where the owls may hoot, the that when plans for the girls' col- debris. No disturbance occurred annual continued the develop- be made up in advertising. squirrels romp and the wood- lege get farther along, a land- in the Independents' dining room. ment, and O'Brien feels, carried Brien gives credit to Ric peekers peck. The Gambier com- scape designer will definitely be the changes to their logical con- "Lights were restored after a- Stickel and Maynard Murch munity has awakened to a real called in to study the whole cam- clusion. In the belief that fur- bout ten tables, each seating six the money-raising effort, and problem of replacing the IoS8 of pus. ther development is needed, O'- people had been overturned. Cru- ports that a drive was Iaunc 12 or more elms killed annually Brien is taking what he feels is den estimated that one-third to last Monday to raise more fin by Dutch Elm disease, and the Senate Violates Turf the next step and reorganizing one-half of the china in the room cial support. Requests for $2 death of several maples along the (Continued. from pclQe 1) the book from top to bottom. He had been broken. The floor was nations have been sent to par northern part of Middle Path. In feels that the new chronological covered with glassware floating in and alumni, and O'Brien ur addition, the administration has organization will give greater a fluid of milk, fruit punch, and students to join the effort. become more inclined to consider vegetable soup. unity to the book by placing the natural beauty of the campus With one eye on the finan "ASKED IF he had any suspic- events in their proper perspec- as an asset which should be better tive. and the other on innovation, ions as to who instigated the riot, developed. Brien and the lleTeille staff PJ Cruden replied, 'I couldn't say. A NEW FEATURE this year on to turn out a book that FOR THE LAST SEVERAL There have been a great many will be the summer supplement, be completely non-traditio years the policy of the mainten- complaints about the food and a an eight page printing mailed out unique, and interesting to say ance dept. was to replace dead general aura of dissatisfaction for to all students in early July. The least. trees with 2 or 3 year-old sap- some two months now. lings raised behind Bexley. How- "Monroe termed the riot 'an in- ever, both the administration and appropriate way to express griev- "Sewing till of KIlO" Cou"'," the maintenance department now ances', and said that the informa- see the need for long-range plan- tion of an advisory committee- The FIRST-KNOX NATIONAL Bank ning. For instance, an expert will would be 'a very good. idea be- have to be called in to determine cause it would keep a line of com- Office locations: Mount Vernon the cause of the death of maples munication open between man- along middle path near the bank. agement and students.'" Salt put on the road during the Centerburg Danville Fredericktown winter or lack of water may be killing them, and the maintenance dept's regular method of replace- ment might not be successful Losses resulting from Dutch elm disease have been hard to keep up vith, and there are several areas which will need trees or planting, such as around the new upper- class dorm, in front of the Prest- • WEST VtlfE IlTI\EET O. Gaverick, C.P.P. MOUNT VEIUION, OHIO PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY Council, Con'd WaOl Li515 Cordially Invited (CcmtiDued :from ~ 1) Hockey Team Wins First As Foster 31E. Gamb;., s-,Mt. Voman PHONE 397·1931 It was noted that the atrocious . 392·1057 trophy case now added to Peirce Draws More Penaltr·:-T~i'rlm~e~T'rIh~a'rln,-,C~a!:p~o~n~e, Hall will be sent back for another. 11======~~==~".III~==r====9 Finally playing the type. of Less than a minute later Tonuny THE KENYON COLLEGIAN Non-Profit.0 Dean Edwards stated "anything hockey they are capable of, the! Morris got some consolation as he BOX 308 U. S. pOST,R. that's not strictly first rate will be Kenyon pucksters dumped Case; scored on a breakaway set up by GAMBIER. OHIO. 43022 out of place in the lounge area." 9-2 last Sunday for their first win, a long pass from Miller. P A I D Edwards revealed that eventually of the season. Only superb goal, Gambier,Oh' a color TV set will be purchased, tending by the Case goalie kept: Poole caught the twine twice PermltNo. and that before long the existing the Lords from scoring more, aSI in the third period to nail down set will be moved to the box in their fine passing kept them in his first hat trick of the season, one. end of the room. The delay complete control of the game. and Lowrey scored with two min- is in maintenance's failure to' POOLE OPENED THE SCOR_ utes left in the game, for his third move the antenna leads. ing for Kenyon but Case tied it: tally of the day. Captain Foster, . ~- ,_.- La . though not managing to score, did The res.ults of the recent sur- Iess lhan a mmu ...... cer. te m h ti t . d 1.0 d Mil manage to stay out of the penalty vey on student vacation prefer- t e rs perio wery an -I box and to pick up four assists. 'ences .Bill Schnall reported over- Ier each converted to put the ReturnR~est.s wheliningly support a three- Lords ahead to stay, but not be-I Case caught the Lords with thre~ plan for Christmas and: fore Tonuny Morris had left al a man in the penalty box for Spring vacations with a two day' tooth embedded in a Case player'si their second goal but from then nets though he was not very busy. The overdue Kenyon viet reading' period before exams. stick. I on it was all Kenyon's show. having only to make sixteen stops. was well-deserved and cad Dean Edwards noted that exams Kenyon got right down to busi~, Freshman Lowrey stole the puck This was due to the tine job done' the result ot fine plaY,~~~ .might run up until the 22nd or ness at the start of the second: and took it in unassisted for his by Kenyon's defense of Menk, a weak opponent. ~jll'::;IO 23rd of December under the new! period, as Skinner hit on a long: second and Kenyon's fifth goal. Schmidlapp, and Skinner who the Lords spent only 2 JllUlUi system, but also reported general' screen shot with an assist from' FRESHMAN GOALIE PETER kept the puck in the Case end of the penalty box while CaseP student support for such a plan.' Poole. 1 Lathrop played a fine game in the the rink for most of the game. I up ten.