St Ate Auditor Raises Roof

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St Ate Auditor Raises Roof SYMPOSIUM BRINGS BURGESS, HARRINGTON Appearances at the Lima America" , published in ·1962 and movie. Burgess is also the author Campus by speakers of national credited with spurring the in­ of s.uch novels as " enderby", stature will be featured as novative and overdue social "Tremor of Intent", and most Symposium Committee events programs of .lfie Kennedy· and recently " M-F'', as well as of dur i ng Spring Quarter . Johnson adm~strations. He has critical works on Shakespeare Headlining the schedule · for also written " The Accidental and James Joyce. He will speak spring are sociologist M ichael Century" ( 1962) and " Towards a on "The Meaning of ' A Clockwork Harrington a.nd novelist-criti c Democratic Left" ( 1968) . Orange'." • Anthony Burgess. Also appearing Anthony Burgess will speak on On April 24, David Massaro will w ill be David Massar o,·an expert fMay 4. Burgess, who cur rently speak on the subject "Religious in contemporary science-fiction. 'teaches at the City College of Thoug_ht in Science Fiction." M i chae l Harrington ' s ap­ New York, arrived at national Massaro currently teaches pearance has been scheduled for prominence as the author of "A cou r ses in science fiction to high April 27. Harrington's most in­ Clockwork Orange", a vision of school seniors in Cleveland and fluentia l book has been his classic the violence- ridden civilization of has r ecently f inished a history of study of the "invisible poor" . in t he future which Stanley Kubrick the subject. this c ountry , " The Other fashioned into t he award_- winning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . A~nyBu~us~s~akonLimaCamp~May4 . February 23, 1973 Lima, Ohio Volume 2, Number 4 OVER ENARSON HOME ST ATE AUDITOR RAISES ROOF (reprinted as appeared in have been living · in a high-rise "He gets a big salary; he should expects the $140,000 to come from prudent expenditure of funds." Cleveland Plain Dealer February apartment rented for them by the 3, 1973.) buy his own home." The auditor gifts to the university and not He also declined specific com­ OSU trustees since he came to added he would seek a way to from tax-generated-funds. ment on Ferguson's criticism. By ROBERT J . CALDWELL OSU last Sept. 1. block the purchase. Shocknessy stressed that the Enarson reportedly had been (Plain Dealer Bureau) The trustees' announcement of The purchase is subject to decision not to use the on-campus unhappy with the rented quarters COLUMBUS - Ohio State the pending purchase of the home approval by the Ohio Board of former · residence of former provided him by the university. Un iversity ended a long search for. Enarson and future OSU Regents and the State Controlling President Novice G. Fawcett had By joint agreement, Enarson for a. home for its new president, presidents brought protests from Board. made valuable real estate and the OSU trustees had decided Dr. Harold L. Enarson, yester­ State · Auditor Joseph T . James W. Shocknessy, an OSU available to the university. to discontinue use of the old day with the announcement it Ferguson. trustee and chairman of the An OSU spokesman said the residence on campus as the planned to buy a $140,000 house in " I think it' s a disgrace; the committee that spent six months $140,000 purchase price was presidential home. It now is Columbus about five miles north taxpayers should rise up in in­ look i ng for a permanent determined after two in ­ occupied by offices. of the campus. dignation and stop it," Ferguson residence for the president, dependent appraisals were made The proposed new presidential Enarson, farmer president of declared. · declined comment on Ferguson's of the property at 285 ·croswell home is eight years old and is Cleveland State University, and Referring to Enarson's $50,000- response. Road, in a posh neighborhood owned by Mr. and Mrs. Herman his. wife and . his aged mother a-year salary, Ferguson said, However, Shocknessy said he near the Park of Roses between H. Van Meter. Van Meter owns N. High Street and the Olentangy an automobile dealership here. Rh. .?r. The house has three bedrooms, Shocknessy said approval of 3112 baths, a study, living,. room, the State Controlling Board is family room, dining room and a necessary because the board kitchen. must pass on all university real The house will be available for !IBRA~Y TO FINE estate purchases. occupancy June l. Plans for Enarson said, "Ti:le home furnishing it were net im­ meets all of the criteria. I think it mediately known. LAX FACULTY was an excellent decision and a (Related Comment Pg. 4) By William Payne Extended book renewals and library, said that at any one time faculty - held overdue books RIFT AT· HOWARD fines for faculty members who there are roughly 75,000 to 85,000 "came to our attention through neglect -them will be standard books checked out . to faculty the computer." operating procedure for members and students, a_nd that He said that a similar problem WASHINGTON, D.C. {AANS) grades to too many students, does University libraries beginning about 20 to 30 per cent of these are last summer was handled by - The acting dean of Howard not distribute financial aid fairly, Spring Quarter. overdue. · notifying offenders that they University Law School has said hires incompetent teachers 'and By April or May the library He said the problem is not, would be charged for the gverdue that a currrent rift between does not give out proper in­ system will have been re ~ however, the · number of books books. students and faculty and staff formation regarding books and programmed to carry out the overdue, "but how many of those "Fines are generally misun­ members has created a situation class schedules. decision of the Library Council to 15,000 or 20,000 l:looks does derstood,'' Besant said. " They wherein " the law school is at the The faculty response has been fine faculty members for overdue somebody else want?°" ' are to allow libraries to keep threshhold of disaster." that the demands are, in Reid's books. Under the present system The library has compiled a list 1material in circulation. They are Dean Herbert 0. Reid made the words, "in poor taste, con­ faculty members can ignore · of offenders to illustrate the not meant to be punitive." statement in the midst of a temptuous and insulting in tone recall notices indefinitely. problem of overdue books. He pointed out that the library continuing student class boycott and approach." The new program will also . Among faculty members, "The .does .not keep the revenue ear:·,ed which had disrupted classes and The current activity was allow both fawlfy members and number one offender on the list from fines. brought unusually high ab­ sparked by a Dec. 22 faculty students unlimited renewal had somewhere in the ·neigh­ senteeism to the institution. decision refusing· to allow privileges qn' materials not borhood of 130 books overdue and Besant and Kincaid both said As a result of the strife (which students to re-take examinations placed on "save." · the top four or five all had over they did not think the faculty is said to be a continuance of long they had failed. Fines will be charged only to 100," according to James R. w<;>uld object to the change. standing differences), both sides As school resumed this month, •those who either negfect to return Kincaid, professor of English and Kincaid said the faculty mem·· charge, the school's quality of students issued a new set of a book after being notified that chairman of Library Council. bers he had talked to "agreed education has fallen. A team demands and sought to set up a t'Je book is on save or to those The council and the director's _unanimously" with the plan. from the American Bar new dialogue with the ad­ who neither renew nor return a office of the library have con­ "We hope they will agree that Association has visited the in­ ministration. book after receiving a recall tacted several on the list in a what we are trying to do is a fair stitution to see if it's ac­ Reid refused, saying that the notice. personal appeal for the return of approach to the problem," creditation should be maintained. school had to go on record as Larry X. Besant, assistant the books, Kincaid said. Besant said. The student grievances charge being unafraid of intimidation director of public services for the · Besant said the problem of that the school gives failing through threat of disruption. ~ Adena is published ~vrry two w~ks by a group of students for the Cl Ohio Stale Univer~ity Lima Campus , and the Lima Technical If. College community. · Views expressed 'herein are those of the editOrs or signers of contributions. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Becky Cotterman STAFF Vi Beleta Cheryl Gladen Scott Dell Scott Goodnight Gretchen Dygert Rosly'tl Hierholzer Don Geiger Marianne R. Sailor Photographer: Dave Uetrecht Advisor : Jack Fitzgerald REINFORCEMENT Dear Adena Editor: What kind of guests are we treated as oppressed children at inviting to use university L.S.H ., but I would hope that as facili.ties and what kind of ad- long as they· are visiting this ministr-ators do we have? university that they would be February 2, 1973, I witnessed Mr. treated as our equals. Ronald Richards, Lima Senior Furthermore, I feel 'that there High's music director, and our is enough elitism in our own Dr. Zimmerman cutting into university i.e. faculty and staff the front of our lunch line - how parking, the faculty lounge and rude.
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