Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH)

 - Class of 1967

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Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1967 volume:

Experience In Things Beautiful EXPERIENCE IN THINGS BEAUTIFUL FROM THOMAS MANN THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN PREFACE BRUCE HAYWOOD REVEILLE 67 KENYON COLLEGE GAMBIER, OHIO Editor’s noto: Experience In Things Beautiful is lithographed in a specially formulated ink by Win. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo. New York. The prints are made from 35mm and 4 x 5 negatives and the final printing of photographs has been done by the Bernard Hoffman Laboratories in New York City. The reproduction is Keller's Velvatone FM method of lithography which has been employed to achieve maximum quality and consistency on the printed page. Warren’s Lustre Offset Enamel Dull has been chosen as a suitable paper stock for tin FM process. The book is set in Optima and Melior type (de- signed by Hermann Zapf). The cover is Champion's Kromecote CIS and the bindery is Riverside Bookbinders of Rochester. New York. The prefatory quotation is taken from an Address delivered at University College, the University of Chicago, June 6, 1959 by Dr. Leo Strauss. Robert Maynard Hutchins Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago, and is reprinted by permission of the author. The Magic Mountain quotations conform with the Alfred A. Knopf edition of 1960. translated by H. T. I.owe-Porter. These quotations are protected by copyright and are reprinted here by special permission of the publisher. Alfred A. Knopf. Inc. The editor would like to extend his appreciation to the following indi- viduals for their assistance in making possible the publication of this book: Thomas J. Edwards, Bruce Haywood, Robert H. Horwitz, John W. Landry. I). David Long, F. Edward Lund. B. Peter Seymour. William H. Thomas. DANIEL S. HOROWITZ. Editor YALE M. GREENFIELD, Associate Editor Photography: George Berndt, William Dye, Yale Greenfield, Daniel Horowitz. Kurt Lorenz. Richard Nolan. Philip Rinaldo, Markham Stevenson. Editorial Consultants: William Brown, Edward Hallowell. Michael Kirch- berger, Artur Kosiakowski. Richard Nolan. Philip Rinaldo, John Schladen, John Tucker. c Copyright. 1967, by Kenyon College FOREWORD It isn't long before the Kenyon student reading The Magic Mountain begins to see how remarkably similar are the worlds of experience which lie atop that Swiss mountain and upon his Ohio hill. This isn’t so surprising, despite the cultural and temporal gulf which seems at first to divide them, for Thomas Mann's vast work is a novel of education and. though his hero’s experiences may seem initially far removed from the Kenyon curriculum, parallels quickly suggest themselves. It has been my good fortune to explore both worlds in the company of Kenyon men and I am happy to write a preface to this intriguing effort to join them through a marriage of photograph and text. It is a union. I think, that would have delighted Thomas Mann, himself at home in America during long years of exile. B. H. Liberal education, which consists in the constant intercourse with the greatest minds, is a training in the highest form of modesty, not to say of humility. It is at the same time a training in boldness: it demands from us the complete break with the noise, the rush, the thoughtlessness, the cheapness of the Vanity Fair of the intellectuals as well as of their enemies. It demands from us the boldness implied in the resolve to regard the accepted views as mere opinions, or to regard the average opinions as the ex- treme opinions which are at least as likely to be wrong as the most strange or the least popular opinions. Liberal education is lib- eration from vulgarity. The Greeks had a beautiful word for vulgarity”; they called it apeirokalia, lack of experience in things beautiful. Liberal education supplies us with experience in things beautiful. LEO STRAUSS PREFACE Hans Castorp, “that still unwritten page as Mann calls him, is what heredity and an affluent industrial society have made him when, on the threshold of manhood, he goes up the mountain to join his cousin, Joachim. The world of Davos and the sanitarium, its rarefied atmosphere ambiguously “good for the disease, eventually yields to Castorp an understanding of the human condition such as the flatland would never have provided. For on the mountain, removed for a time from the necessity to cope with that flatland world on its own terms, Castorp comes first to know himself—the dimensions of his own person, his lusts and needs, his inadequacies and his strengths—but only after he has been shocked out of his complacent acceptance of the rightness of everything “down below by confronting the fact that death rules “up above. It is “death in a host of manifestations that the mountain world shows to Castorp. First he sees death only as a force that crushes the living, bringing an end to movement, growth, love and joy. But he comes to understand the presence of death also in the printed page, the painting that holds nature permanently fast, the idea that becomes the binding slogan, the faith that paralyzes the believer. All these at first seem evidence of the superiority of death and its sovereignty over life and Castorp plunges into their study, thinking to find a clue to the riddle of existence. A series of eager pedagogues offer to guide him, each claiming the whole truth for his particular approach. There is the Italian, Settembrini, who preaches a threadbare humanism and advocates the individual’s surrender to the masses’ progress. There is the Jesuit Naphta, bom a Jew, whose road to salvation passes through terror and absolutism. There are the two doctors, men of science, who in turn explain the spiritual in terms of the physical and the physical by means of the spiritual. And above all there is the seductive Madame Chauchat who, Castorp feels instinctively, has more to teach him than do his teachers. Yet each one, Castorp comes to see, is more concerned to make him a receptacle for a particular and confining faith than to encourage his growth to understanding. Castorp must in the end find his own way to knowledge. Time becomes his ally and his great teacher, for it is only time that admits growth and only time that provides experience. The pedagogues, having become the rigid captives of particular beliefs or modes of being, are as far removed from time as the mountain world in which they dwell: they are already “dead.” It is left to Castorp to discover the relationship between life and death that has escaped his mentors. Out of the constant experimentation that Settembrini has urged upon him, out of the eternal debate between the champions of this view and that, out of his observations of the representatives of humanity that surround him, Castorp creates his own vision of life. Death, he learns, must be put in its proper place. It can equally well be understood as the force which enhances life, which supports it and continually refreshes it: It is from the root-pierced grave that the young tree draws life, from the body of the victim that the predator sucks his sustenance, and from the death of each generation that the next has its existence. The paradox is extended: art, which imposes death upon a moment of existence by arresting its flow, holds life's beauty forever fast; out of a jumble of frozen ideas we construct the frame that lets us define the vital world about us; building upon the dead past we enjoy the riches of the present. The education of I Ians Castorp is the discovery, ultimately, of form and of love. All form, he discerns, has death somehow behind it. for form means giving definition to thrusting, bursting life, thus ending movement and development. Yet without form there can be no life, no relationship of a self to an external reality, no intercourse between one being and the next. “All things are the vehicle of both life and death,” Castorp can finally say to himself and within that paradox lies the implicit choice for man. Mis form-giving activity can either enhance life or destroy it. Which he chooses will depend on his capacity to love—to love in the sense that Castorp understands the word. Love is not the impulse to life, but the will to sustain it. It means a sympathy for the naive, for the growing and developing, but also for that out of which it has grown. It means living without wishing to possess, living for the others as well as for the self. All that humanity has to sustain itself in face of the horrible aspect of death is love. Above all else, to love means to give back to life at least as much as one takes from it. for only thus can we repay the debt that we, the living, owe to life. In the end Castorp must go down from the mountain, for it is down in the fiatland that the eternal struggle rages between the forces which support life and those which threaten it. He must take his stand in the service of those other children of life whom he loves and who. alas, in the midst of life will be denied the vision afforded him. On the mountain death still holds sway, still offering to other children of life who find their way there a place removed from time and a chance to sit above the dance of life and observe its moving pattern. It is a world where life can be put upon the dissecting table for a moment, examined under the microscope, glimpsed through the prism of art. It can provide a vision of life, so long as the children do not fall victim to death’s allurement. “All things are the vehicle of both life and death”—this is the supreme paradox of the mountain, the supreme paradox of being. Gamhicr. Ohio April 19. 1967 Bruce Haywood FROM THOMAS MANN THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN The young man with parts is no unwritten page, he is rather one upon which all the writing has already been done, in sympathetic ink, the good and the bad together: it is the schoolmaster’s task to bring out the good, to obliterate for ever the bad. by the methods of his profession.” — ----------T ----- ------------------------ ■ ...... .-it .i- i. ,. i . . .. . .. —fn---—--—-m Two days’ travel separated the youth—he was still too young to have thrust his roots down firmly into life—from his own world, from all that he thought of as his own duties, interests, cares and prospects; far more than he had dreamed it would when he sat in the carriage on the way to the station. Space, rolling and revolving between him and his native heath, possessed and wielded the powers we generally ascribe to time. From hour to hour it worked changes in him, like to those wrought by time, yet in a way even more striking. Space, like time, engenders forgetfulness; but it does so by setting us bodily free from our surroundings and giving us back our primitive, unattached state. Yes, it can even, in the twinkling of an eye, make something like a vagabond of the pedant and Philistine. Time, we say, is Lethe; but change of air is a similar draught, and, if it works less thoroughly, does so more quickly. — —z: - - 1 ■ ■■ ■ in i There is a state, in our human life, there are certain scenic surroundings—if one may use that adjective to describe the surroundings we have in mind—within which such a confusion and obliteration of distances in time and space is in a measure justified, and temporary submersion in them, say for the term of a holiday, not reprehensible. The magic part of it lies in the fact that the stuff that is conserved is withdrawn from the effects of time, it is hermetically sealed from time, time passes it by, it stands there on its shelf shut away from time. “And in the sphere of the higher mathematics, if you would rest your case thereon, then follow your cycle from perfection to perfection, and, from the teaching of our eighteenth century, learn that man was originally good, happy, and without sin, that social errors have corrupted and perverted him, and that he can and will once more become good, happy, and sinless, by dint of labour upon his social structure—” “The friend of humanity cannot recognize a distinction between what is political and what is not. There is nothing that is not political. Everything is politics. Thus he went on, Hans Castorp laughing with good-natured enjoyment at this glib and prolific stream of slander. It was, indeed, great fun to listen to, so eloquent was it, so precisely rendered, so free from every trace of dialect. The words came, round, clear-cut, and as though newly minted, from his mobile lips, he tasted his own well-turned, dexterous, biting phrases with obvious and contagious relish, and seemed to be far too clear- headed and self-possessed ever to mis-speak. __ •i- 1-'- — Bless us and keep us! Hans Castorp said to Joachim, as they stood in the lift. What a pedagogue it is! He said himself that he had the ‘pedagogic itch.’ One has to watch out with him, not to say more than one means, or he is down on you at once with all his doctrines. But after all. it is worth listening to, he talks so well; the words come jumping out of his mouth so round and appetizing—when I listen to him, 1 keep seeing a picture of fresh hot rolls in my mind’s eye. Malice, my dear sir, is the animating spirit of criticism; and criticism is the beginning of progress and enlightenment.” ■ i- ‘‘Per—mit me. I know what you would say: that the views you represent are not, of necessity, your own: that you have only chanced upon that one of all the possible ones there are, as it were, in the air, and you try it on, without personal responsibility. It befits your time of life, thus to avoid the settled convictions of the mature man, and to make experiments with a variety of points of view.” He felt beforehand, quite clearly, that such experiences, whatever the course of them, could never be anything but in bad taste, unintelligible and humanly valueless. And yet he was on fire to go through them. r •’ •• -■ ■« ■J ‘fill III - - ----- He probed profoundly. While the moon took its appointed way above the crystalline splendours of the mountain valley, he read of organized matter, of the properties of protoplasm, that sensitive substance maintaining itself in extraordinary fluctuation between building up and breaking down; of form developing out of rudimentary, but always present, primordia; read with compelling interest of life, and its sacred, impure mysteries. I lore was a world to conquer, large enough that even to survey it was a difficult task at first, and bewildering; yet a world full of beautiful possibilities. “Hut what troubles me is that your experiment should lead you in just this direction. I doubt if it is a question of sheer chance. I fear the presence of a general tendency, which threatens to crystallize into a trait of character, unless one makes head against it. I feel it my duty, therefore, to correct you.” “Oh, what a schoolmaster! he said. “A humanistic one, of course. He never leaves off setting you right—first by means of anecdote, then by abstractions. And the things one gets to talk about with him, things you would never have thought you could talk about, or even understand! And if I had met him down below, he added, I never should have understood.” I Iere was a schoolmaster—hut yonder was a woman with narrow eyes. But when a man is in Hans Castorp's state—or the state he was beginning to be in—he longs, above all, to have her of whom he dreams aware that he dreams, let reason and common sense say what they like to the contrary. Thus we are made. How people in this state go about to betray themselves is hard to define; but it seems they can neither do nor leave undone anything which would not have that effect—doubly so, then, in a society like that of the Berghof, where, as the critically minded Herr Settembrini once expressed it, people were possessed of two ideas, and only two: temperature—and then again temperature. What is time? A mystery, a figment—and all-powerful. It conditions the exterior world, it is motion married to and mingled with the existence of bodies in space, and with the motion of these. Would there then be no time if there were no motion? No motion if no time? We fondly ask. Is time a function of space? Or space of time? Or are they identical? Echo answers. Time is functional, it can be referred to as action; we say a thing is “brought about” by time. What sort of thing? Change! In the rhythmic monotony of time’s flow, in the well-nigh minute articulation of the normal day—that day which was ever, even unto confusion and distraction, the same day, an abiding eternity, so that it was hard to say how it ever managed to bring forth any change. KuL _____ kiii.ill • niff hi. III • • • it 1,1% , lhii % mi lh. r.lfff nf ' '• • I • -in 1 , • ' •■ ! Im h nf -• «-« It Ill 111,1 .till!. m Ih ,ftjr _ '• • • -■. 1 m Oh- lh ., u M •% r w r unite • •I the ilint rj ft r fU 111.! r it 1 «• • .Sirri-i «.ii mu verj • •If. iMrrniv, ftiain tl c utili fMec MirmiiiiUril tiy l.«rk lmi|ilr« nf | ,iiv riMliiiin fur tfie niy In. inly .1 lr«n • •«•r ••niilr violent M.iso • . ’ '•• ••I' %a% libck, ami 1 • •• ill.,1 ilirea t i, ,n r frl«utnK In 4| s of or • ••«n«e| % ecltovtl. Tl.cy % ■ ! M r t «l ritt nrotiv ,,,,M % fMrrinrnr l '•••it 4 iliM4ii, c with an l.rar ..f. ibonnl. ',,MM « funtft« nJ V -%. 1 u !• Wm 1 rv-?4 , Mi °f «■■•••• i I4'u..,m J? • •” « . i. ,,w • ’ ‘ U f.„ I1' 1 ' ‘m •r,n4 „h.,„¥ utw - ’7 W ----------------- I... - . ’ • K “But after all, time isn’t ‘actual.' When it seems long to you, then it is long; when it seems short, why, then it is short. But how long, or how short, it actually is, that nobody knows.” He was unaccustomed to philosophize, yet somehow felt an impulse to do so. The child of civilization, remote from birth from wild nature and all her ways, is more susceptible to her grandeur than is her untutored son who has looked at her and lived close to her from childhood up, on terms of prosaic familiarity. The latter scarcely knows the religious awe with which the other regards her, that awe which conditions all his feeling for her. and is present, a constant, solemn thrill, in the profoundest depth of his soul. He had an odd name for the serious mental preoccupations which absorbed him in his picturesque retreat; he called them taking stock”; the expression, crude as it was, defined for him an employment which he loved, even though it was bound up in his mind with the phenomena of fear and giddiness and palpitation, and made his face burn even more than its wont. — “You ought not to brood and dream, Engineer,” Settembrini interrupted him. “You must resolve to trust to the instincts of your youth and your blood, urging you in the direction of action. And also your training in natural science is bound to link you to progressive ideas. You see, through the space of countless ages, life developing from infusorium up to man: how can you doubt, then, that man has yet before him endless possibilities of development? N v % . Hans Castorp smiled at Herr Settembrini’s literary generalizations. And again, from his distant couch, he cast a metaphorical eye upon the sphere from which he had been snatched. He called up memories, he made an effort to judge objectively, and found that distance enabled him to do so. It is a cruel atmosphere down there, cruel and ruthless. And now came on, as come it must, what Hans Castorp had never thought to experience: the winter of the place, the winter of these high altitudes. —Music? It is the half-articulate art, the dubious, the irresponsible, the insensible. Perhaps you will object that she can be clear when she likes. But so can a brook—what good is that to us? That is not true clarity, it is a dreamy, inexpressive, irresponsible clarity, without consequences and therefore dangerous, because it betrays one into soft complacence.—Let music play her loftiest role, she will thereby but kindle the emotions, whereas what concerns us is to awaken the reason. Music is to all appearance movement itself—yet, for all that, I suspect her of her quietism. Let me state my point by the method of exaggeration: my aversion from music rests on political grounds.” — “I think it's quite proper to celebrate the feasts up here as they come, and mark off the time in the usual way. just a dead level of monotony, without any breaks at all, would be too awful for words.” ‘‘Music, as a final incitement to the spirit of men. is invaluable— as a force which draws onward and upward the spirit she finds prepared for her ministrations. But literature must precede her. By music alone the world would get no further forward. Alone, she is a danger. For the time element in music is single. Into a section of mortal time music pours itself, thereby enexpressibly enhancing and ennobling what it fills. But a narrative must have two kinds of time: first, its own, like music, actual time, conditioning its presentation and count, and second, the time of its content, which is relative, so extremely relative that the imaginary time of the narrative can either coincide nearly or completely with the actual, or musical, time, or can be a world away. May we take it that our simple hero, after so many years of hermetic-pedagogic discipline, of ascent from one stage of being to another, has now reached a point where he is conscious of the meaningfulness of his love and the object of it. We assert, we record that he has . . . The truth was that his very destiny had been marked by stages, adventures, insights, and these filing up in his mind suitable themes for his stock-taking” activities, and these, in their turn, ripened him into an intuitional critic of this sphere, of this its absolutely exquisite image, and his love of it. To the point even that he was quite capable of bringing up all three as objects of his conscientious scruples! Only one totally ignorant of the tender passion will suppose that such scruples can detract from the object of love. On the contrary, they but give it spice. It is they which lend love the spur of passion, so that one might almost define passion as misgiving love. You see, what perplexes the world is the disparity between the swiftness of the spirit, and the immense unwieldiness, sluggishness, inertia, permanence of matter. We must admit that this disparity would be enough to excuse the spirit’s lack of interest in reality, for the rule is that it has sickened long before of the ferments that bring revolution in their train. But we are not indulging in flights of fancy. We are adhering strictly to the personal experience of our simple-minded hero, which in some way defying exact definition it has been given us to know, and which indicates that when all the uses of this world unitedly become flat, stale, and unprofitable, they are actually possessed by a demonic quality capable of giving rise to the feelings we have described. Hans Castorp looked about him. He saw on every side the uncanny and the malign, and he knew what it was he saw: life without time, life without care or hope, life as depravity, assiduous stagnation; life as dead. Yet this much is clear, to any human understanding: that when a young man has lived years long in the way this one had, something may gather—may accumulate, as our engineer might put it—in the depths of his soul, until one day it suddenly discharges itself, with a primitive exclamation of disgust, a mental “Oh, go to the devil!” a repudiation of all caution whatsoever, in short with a challenge. f u ! can speak of I Ians Castorp's feeling of kinship with the w ild powers of the winter heights, it is in this sense, that despite i is pious awe he felt these scenes to be a fitting theatre for the ue of his involved thoughts, a fitting stage for one to make io. scarcely knowing how. found it had devolved upon him to - • stock of himself, in reference to the rank and status of the I lomo Dei. !. on the other hand, it was something in the highest degree fleeting and tenuous; a thought, nay, a dream, the frightful, infinitely alluring dream of a young man whose unspoken, unconscious questioning of the universe has received no answer save a hollow silence. We can only he grateful to a man like Herr Settembrini, who with pedagogic dogmatism characterized metaphysics as the “evil principle. to the young man in whose fate we are interested, and whom he had once subtly called “life’s delicate child. . . . the meaning, the end and aim of the critical principle can and may be but one thing: the thought of duty, the law of life. -‘-JlStt h There is both rhyme and reason in what I say, I have made a dream poem of humanity. I will cling to it. I will he good. I will let death have no mastery over my thoughts. For therein lies goodness and love of humankind, and in nothing else. Death is a great power. One takes off one’s hat before him, and goes weavingly on tiptoe. Me wears the stately ruff of the departed and we do him honour in solemn black. Reason stands simple before him. for reason is Only virtue, while death is release, abandon, immensity, desire. A belief, a given conception of the universe, an idea—in short, a will, is always in existence; which it is the task of the intellect to expound and demonstrate. I,et us put it thus: a conception which of the spirit, and therefore significant, is so because it reaches beyond itself to become the expression and exponent of a larger conception, a whole world of feeling and sentiment, which, whether more or less completely, is mirrored in the first, and in this wise, accordingly, the degree of its significance measured. Further, the love for such a creation is in itself “significant ; betraying something of the person who cherishes it, characterizing his relation to that broader world the conception bodies forth—which, consciously or unconsciously, he loves along with and in the thing itself. “Analysis as an instrument of enlightenment and civilization is good, in so far as it shatters absurd convictions, acts as a solvent upon natural prejudices, and undermines authority; good, in other words, in that it sets free, refines, humanizes, makes slaves ripe for freedom. But it is bad, very bad, in so far as it stands in the way of action, cannot shape the vital forces, maims life at its roots.” 1 lis right to recognize and to distinguish between good and evil, reality and counterfeit, was indefeasible; woe to them who dared to lead him astray in his belief in this creative right. •. wuuam1 naann ........... I find it a simply priceless arrangement of things, that the formal, the idea of form, of beautiful form, lies at the bottom of every sort of humanistic calling. It gives it such nobility, I think, such a sort of disinterestedness, and feeling, too, and—and—courtliness—it makes a kind of chivalrous adventure out of it. That is to say—I suppose I am expressing myself very ridiculously, but—you can see how the things of the mind and the love of beauty come together, and that they always really have been one and the same—in other words, science and art; and that the calling of being an artist surely belongs with the others, as a sort of fifth faculty, because it too is a humanistic calling, a variety of humanistic interest, in so far as its most theme or concern is with man—you will agree with me on that point.” -----------------------------------■ - - - 1 ' — -.f ««•-■ — -,T-v -«• •« iff • •« I 4 1 KMl ui ... .. 'I ■ : Jr : r: ,ir Xtertttt'xxrxsirtt “—There you have it, gentlemen, there you have it! Settembrini cried with ardour, and enlarged upon the cult of the word,” the art of eloquence, which he called the triumph of the human genius. For the word was the glory of mankind, it alone imparted dignity to life. Not only was humanism bound up with the word, and with literature, but so also was humanity itself, man’s ancient dignity and self-respect.” “That which you would disparage as a divorce between literature and life is nothing but a higher unity in the diadem of the beautiful; I am under no apprehension as to the side on which high-hearted youth will choose to fight, in a struggle where the opposing camps are literature and barbarism. Or, rather, it followed directly from the union, the unity that subsisted between humanity and literature, for the beautiful word begets the beautiful deed. The purifying, healing influence of literature, the dissipating of passions by knowledge and the written word, literature as the path to understanding, forgiveness and love, the redeeming might of the word, the literary spirit as the noblest manifestation of the spirit of man. una, however weakened the subjective perception of it has •come, has objective reality in that brings things to pass. It is a irstion for professional thinkers—Hans Castorp, in his youthful irrogance, had one time been led to consider it—whether the hermetically sealed conserve upon its shelf is outside of time. The snow melted apace, it turned grey, became porous and saturated; the drifts shrank together, and seemed to sink into the earth. There was a gurgling, a trickling and oozing, all abroad. The trees dripped, their masses of snow slid off; the shovelled-up barricades in the streets, the pallid layers carpeting the meadows, disappeared alike, though not all at once, they had lain too heavy for that. Then what lovely apparitions of the springtime revealed themselves. rm rmnnir myrn n-rrrriT n rr frinn ma m f n rn t nn “I repeat, that therein lies our duty, our sacred duty to feel. Feeling, you understand, is the masculine force that rouses life. Life slumbers. It needs to be roused, to be awakened to a drunken marriage with divine feeling.” - , - - ■ 1 t He went further, and took counsel with himself over such vast problems as form and freedom, body and spirit, honour and shame, time and eternity—and succumbed to a brief but violent spell of giddiness, on a sudden thought that all about him the columbines were in blossom once more, and his year here rounding to its close. Some day he would sit in the Assembly, or on the Board of Directors, he would help make the laws, he would occupy some honourable office and share the burdens of sovereignty. He would belong to the executive branch, perhaps, or the Finance or Building Commission. His voice would be listened to, his vote would count. It would be interesting to see what party he would choose. “You are young, you will have a share in this decision, it is your duty to influence it. And therefore let us thank the fates that brought you up here to this horrible region, thus giving me opportunity to work upon your plastic with my not unpractised, not wholly flagging eloquence, and make you feel the responsibility which—which your country has in the face of civilization—” Vu. .■ x .1,111.1.1..,i ■!. j.Mu ■ •2 ——■----------— r ' • • ■ - .-i-i-i---- - Whoever is unable to offer his person, his arm, his blood, in the service of the ideal is unworthy of it; however intellectualized, it is the duty of a man to remain a man.” We must repeat that, as for us, we have been speaking only of the lawful licence of a holiday . . . To call into question our human means and powers of perception, to question their validity, would be absurd, dishonourable, arbitrary, if it were done in any other spirit than to set bounds to reason, which she may not overstep without incurring the reproach of neglecting her own task. ' 'rT • rf iwrfit i 1 l IV A man lives not only his personal life, as an individual, but also, consciously or unconsciously, the life of his epoch and his contemporaries. He may regard the general, impersonal foundations of his existence as definitely settled and taken for granted, and be as far from assuming a critical attitude toward them as our good Hans Castorp really was; yet it is quite conceivable that he may none the less be vaguely conscious of the deficiencies of his epoch and find them prejudicial to his own moral well-being. All sorts of personal aims, hopes, prospects, hover before the eyes of the individual, and out of these he derives the impulse to ambition and achievement. Now. if the life about him, if his own time seem, however outwardly stimulating, to be at bottom empty of such food for his aspirations; if he privately recognize it to be hopeless, viewless, helpless, opposing only a hollow silence to all the questions man puts, consciously or unconsciously, yet somehow puts, as to the final, absolute, and abstract meaning in all his efforts and activities; then, in such a case, a certain laming of the personality is hound to occur, the more inevitably the more upright the character in question; a sort of palsy, as it were, which may even extend from his spiritual and moral over into his physical and organic part. In an age that affords no satisfying answer to the eternal question of “Why? “To what end? a man who is capable of achievement over and above the average and expected modicum must be equipped either with a moral remoteness and single-mindedness which is rare indeed and of heroic mould, or else with an exceptionally robust vitality. i ... — hamlet football ' ' -V-. i ; ' • v •; • • - L. v .V i' X $ Ai j• v,V VV si '' v V u football ) i I t Any account of the 1966 football sea- son is bound to consist of excuses, apolo- gies, commendations for a few individual performances, and perhaps a few quali- fied predictions about next year’s team. It could be worse. What if all we say is that we did the best we could? But the real frustration of the season is that it was clear to all that we should have done better with what we had, or rather that we should have done something. If you had watched only the defense play, you probably would have expected an impressive season record. High-spir- ited junior co-captain Gary Pendergraph HENRY A. JOHNSON Chairman. Department of Physical Education K O 0 Defiance 35 6 Center 20 8 Otterbein 24 12 Scwancc 41 0 Hiram 18 13 Wilmington 7 6 Oberlin 30 6 Mount Union 19 0 Denison 63 89 ■mi played with the field leadership and con- sistent brilliance that would have quali- fied him for first siring of any team in the conference. His sophomore understudies, Wes Poth and Bob Falkcnstine, both de- veloped in confidence and experience during the year. The defensive line gained strength, bulk, and experience in Jeff Enck, certainly the most valuable addition to the team this season. John Grcllcr had his best season as the other defensive tackle. Probably the most no- ticeable gain over last year’s problems was the finely-coached secondary of Hurkharl, Federer, Kelly, and Ulrcy, who, although small, were seldom over- powered. The entire defensive team should return and improve next season, and offer another performance that re- quires no apologies. But whereas the defense improved, the offense lost ground. Take away a single pass from Burkhart to Profusek. and you are left with an awfully dull season. The graduation of all-conference end John Rutter and the injury of Jim Rattray early in the season took away the scoring punch of the team. Senior half-backs Bucky Williams and Lee Van Voris piled up lots of yards but few points. The run- ning game, in spite of the addition of resourceful Bob Koc to the line, was never cither consistent or dependable. The entire offense, although as big and as strong as many of their opponents, was rather slow and uncoordinated. Only four will leave the team at grad- uation. In those who will return there is the potential to have an exciting team— potential that was untouched this year. The spirit and determination of the team is strong. Hopefully development and success will follow in the seasons to come. football DONALD E. WHITE Members: Abrams, Alexander. K. Anderson, Baley. Brighiman. M. Brown. W Brown (co-captain). Burkhart. C. Carlson. Chamberlin. Davis. Dcl.ong. Dun ning. Falkcnstine. Federer. Geiger, Grcllcr. Griescr. Hatcher, Hensley. Jones. Kalbrunncr. Kcincr. Kelly. Koe, MacIntyre, Nciman. Osborn. Pender graph (co-captain). Perry. Peterson. Poth. Profusek. Rattray, S. Ryan. Stircs Ulcry. Ulrcy. Van Voris. Walker. Walts. C. Williams. Zagol. l.okcy (man ager). 91 Coach Bob Harrison, along with co- captains Craig Jackson and Bill North- way. led his tribe of booters to a 4-6 record, the best since 1962. After starting the season off with a routine 4-1 victory over Wilmington, the Lords slumped to a four game losing streak. Then came the big change. Harrison had Randy St. John and Jackson, both linemen, exchange positions with halfbacks Jon Kaufman and Ned Smythc, thus increasing the goal-getting potential of the offense while providing the defense with some much- needed depth. Ohio State was the first to come up against the Lords' new look . After playing four scoreless quarters, scrappy Watson Lowery scored in the first over- time. Goalie Rick Haskins and fullback “Sleepy Andrew Bersin kept the Kenyon defense airtight for the rest of the game and the Lords emerged victori- ous over the powerful Buckeyes. Their thirst for victory unquenched, the team defeated Cleveland State 2-1 before an enthusiastic Homecoming crowd on an overtime goal scored by brawny Ned Smythc. Following a loss to first place soccer v v . ' Sr i______ tin soccer K O 4 Wilmington 1 2 Hiram 4 1 Wesleyan 7 0 Ccdarvillc 2 0 Bowling Green 3 1 Ohio State 0 2 Cleveland State 1 0 Wooster 5 5 Mount Union 0 0 Denison 12 Members: Baker. Becker. Bcrsin. Dorrance. Fleming. Friis-MikkcUon. Hoffman. A. Jackson. C. Jackson (co-captain). Kaplan. Kaufman. I.eighton. Lowery, Meigs. Miller. Natoli. Nave. Northway (co-captain). Kainka. Scranton. Skinner. Smythc. St. John. Witncr. Wooster, the Lords downed Mount Union 5-0 in a game which featured a fifty yard goal by co-captain Jackson. With a dismal loss to the Big Red of Denison, the Lords had won three of their last five games. Although the loss of seniors Craig Jackson. Dave Bradford, and Jim Ceascr will certainly be felt, the future looks bright for the Kenyon soccer team. Bob Harrison’s rebuilding is beginning to pay oil with personnel like juniors Paul Kigali. Northway. and Haskins; sopho- mores like Larry Witncr. Dick Baker, and Lowery; and freshmen like Steve Becker. Ray Rainka, Kaufman, St. John, and Smythc, assuring even greater suc- cess in the future. Under the leadership of fiery Andy Bcrsin and decisive Rick Haskins, next year's co-captains, the 1967-soccer team should be the best ever. 93 basketball After one of the Lords' rare losses this past season, forward Terry Parmelcc sat in the collcc shop and lamented, I don’t know what hap- pened. It shouldn't have happened. My attitude is tremendous this year. Last year my attitude was miserable. I was playing my own game. But this year is different. Now I know the team can win.” Fortunately, that was one of Terry's few mo- ments of pessimism this season. The Kenyon hoopsters nearly went all the way by compiling an 18-6 record, the best in Kenyon’s history, humiliating complacent conference power Ottcr- bein in the process, and raising some eyebrows among followers of Ohio Conference basketball who had always written Kenyon off as a road- apple team. basketball Members: Alexander. Carr, Cisar. Dunlop. Finstrom, Foster. Fox. Harley (captain), Hensley. L. Johnson. I . Kendrick. Kueblcr. Marty. Parmelec. Pope, Rinka. S. Ryan. Shook. As Terry pointed out. the Lords suc- cess had a lot to do with an overall change in attitude. No longer were the Lords to be thought of as the sad-eyed tragedians of the Ohio conference. Man for man. they presented the best starting line-up in the conference, with all-confer- ence freshman guard John Rinka and second team all-conference guard John Dunlop (Kenyon’s J-twins the fasci- nated sportswriters dubbed them) leading the assault. Rinka ended the season with a 24-point average and his thumb to his nose to all those who had said he couldn’t make it in the hyperthyroid con- ference because of his non-basketball 5'9 height. Dunlop, now a weathered sophomore, completed the season with an 18.2 average and gave the lie to those who would call him “last year’s star”. Kenyon fans had their greatest laughs on poker-faced opponents when the two guards performed their celebrated slow- down, dribbling the pumpkin like it was a ball bearing and leaving awkward de- fenders doing pratfalls in their wake. K O 65 Ashland 50 84 Capital 75 118 Wilmington 81 80 Baldwin-Wallaoe 91 78 Wooster 77 106 Cleveland State 88 83 Trinity 99 98 Monterey Tech. 70 80 Univ. Dc Nueva Leon 64 68 Wittenberg 78 77 Denison 71 93 Wesleyan 86 80 Marietta 89 68 Hiram 66 94 Center 71 71 Transylvania 83 100 Muskingum 76 86 Heidelberg 84 91 Mount Union 78 80 Otterbein 78 76 Oberlin 65 93 Hiram 85 85 Oberlin 71 71 Baldwin-Wallace 96 basketball The grandstand show that the Lords put on this season should not detract from the essential fact that superior talent and a restored attitude made the season what it was. Furthermore, there will be other seasons like this one, if it is up to Coach Bob Harrison, who could not be honored with a mere parenthetical comment. Harrison showed the conference, the fans, and his team what a superb basketball stylist he was, and that this team is not just the beginning of something big, but is rather here to stay. Terry Parniclcc, Dick Fox, Larry Finslrom, and Kit Marty rounded out the starters. Parmclec played the finest ball of his three year career both offensively and defensively. Fox, also a junior, wound up third in rebounding, and is remem- bered for his defensive work against Otterbein, when he held the vaunted ape Don Carlos to 11 points in the first half. Finstrom and Marty traded off at center, supplying the height and bounce to help the team under the boards where it had never ventured so effectively. The team must have its own memories (partic- ularly of the pcople-to-people tour through Mexico, where Larry was nearly elected presi- dent), but the fans will never forget the decisive assassination of Denison, the mugging of Otter- bein, and the few miles of road that were laid to the conference crown before the juggernaut bowed to an uncharitable Baldwin-Wallacc team. This year also saw the debut of the Kenyon cheerleaders, six ungainly darlings who made it their mission to puncture the patriotism of self- important foes. ROBFRT W. HARRISON 97 Itil —r swimming “Fourteen! Fourteen! Fourteen!” the throng bellowed from the steamy peanut gallery of Shaffer Nadatorium as they watched the Kenyon swimming team swamp Obcrlin. It was no gift of prophecy that. occasioned the chant, for a few weeks later the Lords outswam a dogged horde to capture their fourteenth straight conference championship. It is getting so that only aged pensioners who remember Weismuller breaking the 56 second mark can recall another team winning the Ohio Conference swimming championship. Kenyon fans, however, have a different outlook. No sea- son seems sewn-up tight; the Lords democrat- ically face each challenger with the spirit of quali- fied underdogs. And when the final leg of the freestyle relay is over, and the Lords have done it again, there is no relaxation of this spirit, no lapse into unfulfilled optimism, at least not until the championships arc behind them. ■ Ji I Even as early as September the team was silent on their prospects for the season. They looked forward to an intensive training period which in- troduced the freshmen recruits to weight-lifting, endless cross-country jogs, and cruel distance swimming. The conditioning paid off as early as September when the Lords walked away with the Conference relays. Before winter vacation allowed for some dry- ing-off. the Lords beat the small but tough East- ern Kentucky team, and lost to big and powerful Ohio University. This was the first season in four years that Kenyon has seriously threatened the Mid-American Conference. The team came close to beating Bowling Green, and at least startled rugged Miami with some striking individual per- formances. Larry Witner continued to amaze pool-gazers. Against Oberlin, he broke his own record in the 100-yard freestyle with a 48.8. Other individual stars this year were Keith Bell in the 500 freestyle, the redoubtable Doug Hutchinson in the individual medley. Bill Kollcr in the 200 orthodox, and Phil McManus in the 200 freestyle. RICHARD W. RUSSELL 99 Mu ■JS . i m•.j; tv swimming ii % K O 47 Ohio University 57 57 Eastern Kentucky 47 55 Wooster 46 73 Muskingum 30 49 Howling Green 55 86 Hiram 17 46 Wittenberg 58 68 Baldwin-Wallace 34 36 Miami 68 79 Akron 25 60 Oberlin 44 68 Denison 36 63 Wesleyan 41 Members: P. Arnold. T. Arnold, K. Bell. Cowen. Crawford. Doyle, Gross, Gyory. Hale. Holder (co-captain), Howard. Hutchinson. Kalmbach. Roller. McManus. Moore. Mungcr (co-captain). Offenberger. Patton. Rayman. Ruben- field. Ruttan. Showers. Witner. 100 This was the last season for senior co- captains Tim Holder and Dave Mungcr. The two veterans had a large hand in conditioning the youngsters for combat, and they viewed the fourteenth straight victory as a fitting conclusion to their careers. Captain Holder had this to say about the experience of a Kenyon swim- mer: “The consciousness of the Lord swimmers is aimed toward and geared for the championships, and it is here that Kenyon's depth is revealed. In many events the championships appear to be an intra-squad meet with Lord swimmers competing amongst themselves for the best times. As result of the capability and enthusiasm of Coach Russell, the Kenyon swimmer in the championships is confi- dent that he will do his best. After five months of constant encouragement and superb coaching, he knows that he is ready for the championships—ready to contribute his points to what was this year the Lords’ fourteenth consecutive victory. 101 The selectivity of Kenyon sports comes to light in the Lords’ erratic performance on the wrestling mats over the years. For some reason. Kenyon men who excel in swimming and tennis and basketball cannot handle the most strenuous and agoniz- ing of contact sports. This year’s record provides a perfect example of the paradox. The Lords were handicapped from the start by not being able to fill all the weight categories. So some crucial matches were lost on the passive forfeit of the 177 pound class which we could not till. And in other weight categories plucky combatants could not overcome the strength and experience they encountered in brawnier teams more conditioned to the sport. The team finished with a 1-7 record, but as usual, individ- ual displays of power were enough to keep Coach Watts hopes alive for a winning season. Gary Nave, wrestling in the 152 pound class, compiled an impressive 7-1 match total. His victories were cfTortlcss. and they normally came when the rest of the team was being trounced by relent- wrestling K O 3 Ashland 35 11 Wesleyan 23 18 Obcrlin 29 31 Otterbein 16 6 Mount Union 33 12 Heidelberg 27 22 Capital 23 6 Wittenberg 39 less opponents. Another encouraging individual winner was John Friis-Mikkclson. Only a freshman. John went undefeated through half the season and finished up with a 5-1 chart in the 130 pound category. Other individuals worth noting, although they did not conic out as well arc: Jim Kercscy. Gard Hazen, Tom Aberant. Mark Smith. Harry Burkhart. Pete Scibcl. Ed Gaines, and Ed Lentz. It should be stressed that many of these men did not wrestle before they came to Kenyon. Their match records show that they all per- formed at least equivalent to their opponents, but could not muster the extra measure of wiliness that comes with experience and is necessary to win a wrestling match. Members: Aberant. Bell. Brown. Burkhardt. Friis-Mikkclson. Gaines (co-captain . Gricser (co-captain), Johnston. Kalbrun- ner. Kercscy. Ixighton. Lentz, Nave. Perry, Seibcl, Sheldon. Smith. 103 ----— 532 track 111 ‘klMMH’ ni ‘ a — Kenyon is not a school conditioned to running, jumping, and throwing things. These arc enterprises that require discipline, and. quite frankly, a regimental ath- lete at Kenyon is something of an anomaly. Athletic superiority, when it comes, arrives naturally in the form of an inherently good athlete who knows his trade. Kenyon’s track team has consistently provided a home for such people, and this year was no exception to the long-running story. The team finished the season with a 7-9 record. The year began well with a surprising third in the indoor OAC relays. This victory climaxed an excellent winter season which was amplified by the emergence of junior Art Hensley as an Ohio Conference star. Hensley finished the spring season with an invitation to compete in the triple-jump at the NC'AA national meet. His best jump of 46'2 amazed opponents and teammates alike. Hensley also excelled in the high jump, broad jump, and low hurdles. The trackstcrs responded to good coaching by Don White, to whom track is an expert obsession. In addition to Hensley, there were other improvements. Bill Lokey threw the discus farther than any Kenyon man had ever before with a I25'8 toss. The 440 relay team of Charlie Williams. Lee Van Voris. and Charles Fcdcrcr kept their times in the early forties to chase presumably superior teams. Mitch Sosis. our lone milcr. took several thirds in important meets, and the mile relay team came close to breaking the 3:25 mark. The only drawback to a generally improved season was the lack of spectator interest in track. The team could find few people willing to sympathize with the loneliness of the long-distance runner, sprinter, hurdler, and shot-putter. 104 track K 0 58 Marietta 78 90 Capital 145 Vi 90 Urbana 4 Vi 57 Wittenberg 79 61 Vi Otterbein 54Vi 61 Vi Wooster 54 52 Wesleyan 84 54 Vi Oberlin 74 Vi 54 Vi Hiram 40Vi 28 Wesleyan 89 Vi 28 Muskingum 74 28 Otterbein 36Vi 56 Hiram 80 86 Vi Wilmington 48 86 Vi Rio Grande 36 86 Vi Urbana 12 Vi Members: Balfour. Carlson. Federer, Findlay. Gezon. Hart , Hensley, Hoxter, Johnson. Kcllchcr. Kendrick. Lokey. Marty. Mayer, Morton. Petryshyn. Schultz. Scranton. Snyder. Sosis. Spore. Tuverson. Van Voris (co- captain). Vedder. Williams (co-captain). Yamauchi. lacrosse Throughout the Spring. Kenyon sports enthusiasts were treated to fast and furi- ous action as Coach Dick Watts’ lacrosse team rolled to its best season ever with an overall record of seven wins and two losses. Captained by Tommy Lad and Jim Rattray, the Lord stickmen consist- ently demonstrated the finesse and hustle essential for top-notch lacrosse. Fine in- dividual effort and impressive teamwork contributed greatly to the success of this year’s team. Outstanding individuals for the Lords this year were cited in the annual Mid- west All-Star selections. Defenseman Tommy Lad and midfielder Craig Jack- son were elected unanimously to both the First Team All-Midwest and the All- Hixon Division team. Lad and Jackson were also nominated for the North-South All-Star game; Jackson was selected as a participant. Second Team All-Midwest I honors were garnered by attackman Paul [ Day and face-off middic Jim Rattray. At- tackman Jack Turnbull received Hon- yj curable Mention recognition. IT Dick Watts has accepted a position with L the University of Maryland and will not 1 be returning to Kenyon next year. Mis i loss as well as the loss of seniors Lad, H Rattray, Jackson, Bobby Sikes, and i Barry “Chang” Wood (voted by his teammates this year’s Most Valuable lacrosse Player) will certainly be felt. Returning however, will be goalie P. G. Thomas; attackmcn Day. Turnbull, Jerry Wil- liams. and Robbie Poole; midfielders Dave Houghtlin, Paul Rigali, Robbie Klein, Greg Trip-dodge Blackmcr. Tommy Swiss, Denzil Hollingsworth, and Dave Bushncll; and defensemen Hob Goetze, Bill Piggy Northway. and Steve Gremlin Wuori who has struck fear into the hearts of many opponents with his great speed, fine lateral move- ment. and amazing reflexes. Co-captains for next year’s team will be Jerry Wil- liams and Paul Rigali. It looks like an- other good year for Kenyon lacrosse. E. RICHARD WATTS Members: Baylcy. Herein. Blackmcr, Bootes. Bushncll. Day. Falkcn- stinc, Foulkrod, Fox. Goetze. Hackman. Hollingsworth. Houghtlin, Jackson. Kelly. Klein. Kraushar. Lad (co-captain), Lowery. North- way. Poole. Rattray (co-captain), Rigali. Sacco. Scadron. Swiss. Sykes. Thomas. Thompson. Trevorrow. Turnbull. Williams. Wood. Wuori. Zagol. K O 6 Cleveland Lacrosse Club 5 9 Wesleyan 6 5 Oberlin 10 9 Michigan State 3 9 Ohio University 3 14 Columbus Lacrosse Club 3 5 Bowling Green 3 10 Ohio State University 5 4 Denison 11 108 We would be close to victory, scooping them up in the field behind a hot pitcher, and that man would sit motionless on the bench. A runner in a dilemma between first and second would turn to the bench for instruction and the man would mutter something, sitting there like the Russian ambassador at the United Nations, his guidance rarely translated into action. The man. of course, was the Kenyon Lords' outgoing baseball coach, Henry Johnson. For all his other merits as an administrator. Coach Johnson could do little to give a baseball team what it needed to win. Like many other teams, including the football squad which Coach Johnson also ran, the baseball team never learned how to win. The “individ- ual performers , a cliche in Kenyon sports talk, performed superbly as usual, but individually. Paul Leventon, Rick Haskins, Mike Smith, Ed Shook, Rick Stevens, and Steve Hayes applied their best talents to a team that rarely had a chance because their origin in strategy and identity was incoherent. One remembers the good moments: freshman Roger Novak winning his first collegiate start with a two-hitter. “Zeus Leventon stretching an obvious double into a triple to insure his own pitching victory, and Jeff Jones and Ed Shook making some eye-defying pick-offs from third to first. The team beat Denison twice, but the other games were too absurd to name. Vital coaching would help this team im- mensely. What is particularly needed is some flexibility in the hitting department. During one game this past season, while our side was at bat, an opposing center- fielder was spotted writing a letter home. 109 Members: Allman. Beradino. RorueFumit . Clemmons, Davis. F isher. Gardner. Haskins. Hatcher. Hayes. Jones. Just. Keiner, Kenning. Leventon. Matthewson, McCullough. Nininger, O'Brien. Park. Pirko. Novak. Seeley. Shook. Simanck. M. Smith (captain). Stevens K 0 3 Marietta 8 0 2 1 Wesleyan 7 0 Akron 15 0 1 5 Capital 4 0 Oberlin 9 5 Denison 2 0 1 0 Baldwin-Wallacc 9 4 Wittenberg 14 2 Wooster 4 0 4 1 Muskingum 2 1 0 0 Ashland 6 2 Hiram 7 2 Capital 12 0 Heidelberg 7 1 Heidelberg 3 tennis The team that barely missed a conference championship the preced- ing year failed to parley its momentum this season into a net crown It appeared toward the end of the season that the seniors, though «inning in their own right, were too preoccupied to provide the team with subtler encouragement. The season began well with a 9-0 victory over Marietta and pro- ceeded at pretty much the same pace. Toward the close, their overall record was 7-2. The most satisfying win was over Oberlin which had beaten the Lords’ netmen for eight straight years prior to that after- noon. The greatest pick-up for the Kenyon tennis team this past season was the increase in spectator interest. Quite often, tennis matches oc- curred on baseball and lacrosse Saturdays. Fans on their way over to the baseball fields during lacrosse half-time would discover an en- tirely new game going on accross the road. Consequently, baseball lost some bleacher creatures to the tennis courts. The racketeers who commanded the fans’ attention were Dave Brad- ford. Stu Revo, and Andy Stewart. Bradford suffered only one defeat this season. He dramatized his dedication to the team by getting arrested for speeding on his way to a match. The tennis team is one of the Kenyon sports organizations that ap- pears to be headed for continuing success. It is no accident that their coach is the same Bob Harrison who escorted the basketball team to its heights. A man with that careful equation of energy and knowl- edge can do a great deal to bring a team to life. Harrison has done that with all three teams he coaches. K 9 Marietta 4 Earlham 9 Capital 5 Akron 6 Ohio University 7 Oberlin 9 Baldwin-Wallacc 8 Muskingum 5 Wittenberg 3 Kent State Members: Bradford. Carlson. France, Gold- berg. Hollingcr. Konrad. Moore, Revo. Simon (captain). Stewart. Ill ?t-CUutC oO Wesleyan Heidelberg Wooster Otterbein Heidelberg Capital Marietta Wittenberg Wesleyan Muskingum Akron O I2'A 8 5 9 A 11 6 1A 191A 14 8V4 1A 9 The Kenyon swingers failed to repeat their stunning 1965 drive to the Conference championships. Due to bad weather and some repeated absences, the Lords could not measure up to the competition of Denison and Marietta. A high point of the year was the improvement of Steve Bartlett who broke 80 in nearly every match. His record was augmented by the consistency of Mike Wise, Wade Bosley, and freshman Tom Cisar. But the team discovered that something was lost from their game when they hit the road. Losses to Marietta and Witten- berg seriously affected the golfers delicate frame of mind going into the last part of the season and the Conference championships. In home matches, however, the Lords excelled. They were aided by their knowl- edge of the Hiawatha Golf Course. As one team member pointed out. “Hiawatha is Indian for ‘ground under repair’.” Fortunately, the team was full strength for most of their home meets. Members: Bartlett. Bosley (captain). Carr. Cisar. Davidson. Franklin. Hollinger. Kcnrick. Linck. Rainka. Spence. Wise. KF.NYON KI.AN. Members: Arnold. Baker. Bersin, Blackmcr. Bradford. Brown. Burkhardt. Carlson. Crawford. Davidson. Falkcnstinc. Findlay. Finstrom, Fox. Gaines. Grellcr. Gricscr. Hale. Hartsel. Haskins. Hayes. Hensley. Hutchinson. Jackson. Johnston. Jones. Kalmbach. Kcllchcr. Kelly. Koe, Lad. Leventon. Lift. Lowery. MacIntyre. Marty. Meigs. Miller. Munger. Natoli. Nave. Nieman. Northway. Parmelee. Pendergraph, Perry. Profusek. Polh. Rattray. Kayman, Revo. Rigali, Ryan. Schultz, Seibcl, Shook. Smith. Ulcry. Van Voris, C. Williams. J. Williams. Witner. Wood. Zagol. kw I r COLLEGIAN. Staff: Au, Battle, Bergman. Boruchowit . Brean. Burns, Ellsworth. Field, Fine. Fisher. Freeman, Garland, Glass, Hosier (editor). Hoxter. Kosiako ski. Lavieri, I.ifson, Linton. Rotbart, Schmid. Schonfcld. Smyth. Stuart. Taggart, Willncr. I I HIKA. Staff: M. Kirchhcrgcr P. Cole J. Cook B. Grandillo J. Grandillo P. Rinaldo J. Sutcliffe. WKCO. Staff: Bibel, Bliss, Hump. Cokclcy, Goode, Horwitz. Kobrin (manager). Lewis, Owen. Robinson. Schifman. Summers, Ziga. CHAPEL CHOIR. Member : Arnold, Baird. Balfour. Beasley. Bell. Bellinger. Brcrclon. Blits, Burton. Butt. Ccrncy. Chetton. Clay. Cross. Dailingcr. Derry. Dorrancc. Dunsmore. Fine. Frescoln. Gardner. Greer. Crum, Hackworth. Haraway, Hcithaus. Holloway. Houghtlin. Hunter, Just. Kalynchuk, Klein. Ixslie. Lucky. MacMath. Mallcy, Maurer. Mayer. Mclcher. Michels. Miller. Moore. Morrell. Morrison. Morton. Paraska. Pcdcn. Pinch. Pipe. Pugh. Kisler. Ropp. Seibel. Smith. A. Stewart. J. Stewart. SlracfTcr. Stroyd. Thoms. Thomson. Townsend. Turnbull. Vang. Walker, Woodhousc. Worthen. Zeck. Zollcr. F. Lcndrim. KENYON SINGERS. Members: Aberant. Bertsche. Blank. Bradford, Brightman. Campbell. Clemmons. Crittendon. Dcn- niston. Elliott. F.isenstein. Findlay. Flanzer. Friday. Gaslay, Griffiths. Hecox. Herr, Hull. Lentz. I.ockard, Mancini. Mcacham. Moffitt. Muller. Niningcr, Olbrich. Omachan. Os- borne. Parker. Plunkett. Pommcrcnkc. Rahmcs. Reich. Russell. Scar. Schmid. Scranton. Sheehan. Stircs. Sullivan. Sykes. Tail. D. Thompson, J. Thompson. Ulrich. Van Voris. Wallace. Wildman. Wilson. CHASERS. Members: Butt. Cross. Hcithaus. Hunter, Miller. Pinch. Rislcr. Stewart. Thomson. Turnbull. KOKOSINGERS. Members: Arango. Bell. Hecox. Keiner. Ixslie. Lockard. Plunkett. Scar. Ulrich. Van Voris. Weaber. Wildman. Mayer. Peterson. 114 CAMPUS SENATE. Members: Ccascr. Crump. Edwards. Goodhand. Hallowcll. Haywood. Hettlinger (chairman). Rogan. Schnall, Stewart, Van Voris. STUDENT COUNCIL. Members: Arango. Battle. Butt. Ccascr (president). Dye. Fox. Grcllcr. Greenberg. Goode. Kcnrick, Lee. Morse. Robinson. Schnall. Shapiro. Smith. Stroyd. Tucker. Wise. Wright. INTERFRATERNITY COMMITTEE. Members: Bennett. Clay. Dye. Haines. Honig. Green- berg. Northrop. Owen. Stcbbins (president). Wallace. Wright. 115 JOHN D. KUSHAN Registrar JOHN R KNEPPER Alumni Secretary PHI BETA KAPPA. Members: J. Ccascr. E Hallowell. H. Levy. J. Robinson. 119 r --- ___ administration DAVID M. WHITE Assistant Director of Admissions 120 HOWARD DAVIS Assistant Director of the News Bureau PETER G. EDWARDS Director of the New Bureau EDWARD C. HE1NTZ Librarian C. PETER KIDDER Head Cataloguer. Library — MAJOR RALPH W. BARRETT Commanding Officer, R.O.T.C. PAUL W. ICKES R.O.T.C. PISTOL CLUB. Members: Ames. Boblctt, Burton, Caccci, Dahne, Emmetts, Lokey, Loving. Sharp. Ziga. 122 administration GENE C. PAYNE Resident Nurse WILLIAM H. BOYER Manager. Saga Food Service THOMAS L. BOGARDUS. JR. College Physician 123 administration KEITH O. PITNEY Bookshop Manager HARRY G. ROBERTS Director of Plant and Operations 124 JAMES F. CASS Campus Security Officer utt - — :______________________________________ . AKE it Members: P. Arnold. W. Arnold. Baker. Bell. Brady. Clay. Davidson. Day. Gaines. Hallowell. Hayes. Hcslop. Houghtlin, Irwin. Johnston. Lathrop. I cighton. levey. Under. Maggs. McKin- ney. Miller. Nicderst. OfTcnbergcr. Pcrctzky. Pinch. Price. Reynolds. Kinaldo. Saari. Scadron. Stewart. StraefTcr, Stroyd. Tatgenhorst. Wright, Zoller. Pledges: Balaban. Becker. Cain. Cheston. Cummings. Dickerman. Dorsey. Friis-Mikkehcn, Hahn. Loughman. Nininger. Olbrich. Park. Pendleton. Pittman. Smith. Thompson. ■4 a 125 ftmrnpfcv.VJrVtTVt.ir.yr - - ■i AA$ Members: Arango, Hlackmcr. Bowman. Bradford, Caldwell. Ceaser, Denniston. Greller. Gricser, Haning, Haskins, Hccox, Jackson, Jones, Kelly, Kcrescy. learner. Lokcy, Lowery, MacIntyre, Meigs. Milius, Northway, Pfeiffer. Poole. Kigali, Scarlett. Thomas. Thompson, Van Voris. Vogelci, Watkins. Wcahcr. Wilson. Witncr. Pledges: K. Bell. L. Bell. Blauvelt. Campbell. Coe, Davis. Dorrance. Fleming. Goldberg. Hollingsworth. Kaufman. Kcincr. Kueblcr. Mancini. Plunkett. Pope. Rainka. St. John. Schwartz, Smyth. Stedje. Wrightington. 126 zwmnasriu H Y Members: Baird. Bibel. Campion. Fisher, Freeman. Henninger, Kosiakowski. Ixe. Linton. O'Connell. Owen, Pallin. Ponscn. Reich. Stires. Sullivan. Summers. Tedder. NValthauscn. Pledges: Basel. Brunner. Halpern. Hcchs. Kaisch. Moody. Peck. Schifman. Somit. Townsend. Vang. Member : Alexander. Beifcld. Herein, Brown. Carlson, Crittenden. Dunning. Dunlop. Edel- stein. Ehrbar. Elliott, Falkcnstinc. Findlay. Finstrom, Flinn, Fox. Geiger. Golomb. Han el. Harley. Heisey, Hensley. Honig, Johnson. Kellchcr, l.cvcnton. Ixvy. Liff, Marty. Molden. Murch. Natoli. Neiman. Newcomb. Parmclcc. Patton. Peterson. Poth. Profusek. Radnor. Rattray, Ryan. Sacco. Schladen. Schwar bcck, Schmidlapp, Steniow-ski, Stonchouse. Toan. Ulcry. Waters, Watts. Weingrad. C. Williams. J. Williams. Wuori. Zagol. Pledges: Anderson. Bushncll. Foster. Foulkrod, Franklin. Goetze, Hatcher. Johnson, Kendrick. Peterson. Rinka. St. Georges. Smith. Walker. Members: Allen. Pall. Bandler, Bartlett. Bennett, Bootes. Brown. Carman. Casner, Connor, DcLong. Doyle. Fugitt, Geston. Hackman. Hale. Haserot, Holder. Jackson. Kalmbach. Koe, Landis. McEJroy. Merrill. Miller. Newcomb. Pendergraph. Reichert. Shiah. Shook. Smyth. Stevens. Suratt. Van Riper, Vilas. Wood. Wowezuk. Wright. Yost. Pledges: Adams. Bradford. Corwin. Cowen. Czuba. Draper. Honings. Howard. Kenning. Kollcr. McManus. Poll, Sim- mons. Stewart. Trevorrow. Tuverson. Vevs. ATA . . .... r ii Members: Anderson. Baxter. Hoc. Brennan. Connell. Crawford. Crooks. Derry, Diven. Fey. Forrest. Fritz. Gladstone. Greenberg. Greenfield. Ilackworth, Heithnus, Horowitz, landsman. Lockcy. Monger. Price. Kislcr, Robinson. SchafTncr, Schubart. Seymour. Sheldon. Wallace, Wilcox. Worthen. Yurch. Pledges: Abrams. Bcrtsche. Ford. Hackworth. Hoffman. Hopkins. Lagassa. Lantz. Marshall. Onegtia. Rand. Rcasor, Rubcnfcld. Ruttan. Showers. Van Gundy. Vedder. ♦K2 Members: Hast tan. Berstein. Bosley. Braslin. Burkhart. Currier. Dye. Franke, Gazlay. Griffiths Hartscl, Hcrpolshcimcr. Hull. Hutchinson. Klein. Klophaus. Kristensen. I.cach, Leslie. Mac Math. Monohan. Morrison. Morton. Nash. Nolan. Robinson. Scar. Schultz. Seeley. Scibcl Smith. Spence. Spohr, Strawhackcr. Tail. Walker. K, Wallace. R. G. Wallace. Wallach Wildman. Pledges: Carr. Carroll. Glascbrook, Hollingcr, Jordan. Lewis. Matthcwson. Osborn Robertson. Silber. Skoning, Stuart. — u: ■ Members: Bainton. Baylcy, Beveridge. Dye. Fallat. Fcdcrcr, Haines. Hoxter, Johnson. Kim- ball. Kobclak. Mouat. Murray. Kayher. Rich. Ross. Ryan. Stebbins. Svec. Vaughn. Yamauchi. Pledges: Abraham. Acton. Clemmons. Fazzaro. Gross. Gyory. Hamistcr. Hartz. Kasick, l.cichtcr. Licbcrman, Novak. Reynolds, Schonfcld. Swiss, lumbuli. Wiggins. Zatroch. Ziga. Members: Barnthouse. Beers. Briggs. Burns. Clark. Collins. Cole. Dean. Fourt. Gall. Gibbons. Goldschmidt. Guedenet. Henderson. Hunter. Javorcky. Kcnrick, Krupp. Lilicn. l.ong. Menk, Otis. Pcrilman. Piper. Pratt. Robinson. Rothenberg. Rouechc. Schultz. Scranton. Shulgasser, Skonberg. Stevenson. Vcrral. Wagner. Waldstcin. Pledges: Appleton. Brean, Coltin. Eckroad, Fcnsch, Field, Garland. Mauldin. McManus. Mongeau. Muller. Powell. Thoms. Woodhouse. 133 A AO Members: Beasley. Carmichael. Cross. Dunn. I astman. Fhrenwerth. Gale. Gelfond. Huston. K.ulsa. Konrad. Mattcy, Maurer. McDougall. Morse, Northup. Perry, Sant. Thomson. Ulrich, UtMimi. Villecco. Pledges: Allemano. Askenase. Baley. Bentson. Brown. Cinquina, Cisar. Conan. Fluchere. Giarraputo. Herr. Holloway. Irons. Knapp. Loving. Marks, Montgomery, Qmahan. Paraska. Perry. 134 -J . ......... middle kenyon association Members: Bachr. Baird, Battle, D. Bell. J. Bell. Brcrcton, Burdinc. Caccci, Dahne, Dailingcr, DePasquale. Dippolito. Fib. Hllsw-onh. Fine, Fisher. Galganowic;. Greer. Grum. Hosier. Lane, I ifson. l.oBcllo. Lorenz. Martin. McDowell. Okson. Pirko. Pommerenke. Sinks. Snell. Soul. Stewart. Talbott. Towson. Burton. Dunsmore. Hill. Petryshyn. — — f Members: Ames. Angi. Baird. Bump. Crane. Davidson. Fisher. Goode. Johnston. Jones. Kal- inowski. Fang. Upman. McGuire. Peden. Thomas. Willner. Young. Pledges: Boak. Rohlctt. Coakley. Dale. Fisher. Frescoln. Hannaford. Rahmes. Simanek. Uttal. 136 cngli h GERRIT H. ROELOFS ROBERT W. DANIEL Chairman, Department of Hnglish cnglish PHILIP D. CHURCH ANTHONY G. BING GALBRAITH M. CRUMP PATRICK CRUTTWELL cnglivh MICHAEL BERRYHILL MICHAEL MOTT ALAN B. IX)NOVAN JAMES BAXTER J. ' 1 H cnglish JOHN DAVIDSON WILLIAM DOLWICK RICHARD FREEMAN ROBERT DAVIDSON JAMES GRANDILI.0 WILLIAM DYE ■■MHI -A. ■■■■ cnglish RICHARD LEE GEORGE JONES DAVID LANE MICHAEL KIRCHBERGER KIT LANDIS JEREMIAH MILLER cnglivh B—MMHHBBBBHWHMHMMB — GEORGE WILCOX WARREN WOWCZUK . - DAVID VAUGHN STEPHEN WERTH •siliw tcttx r. . •. - ' t. • . n i: TROND SANDVIK WILLIAM SCAR JOSEPH F. SLATE Chairman. Department of Art DONALD E. BOYD I ■ ■ PAUL SCHWARTZ Chairman. Department of Mu%ic FRANK T. LENDRIM BARRY BELLINGER KENNETH L. TAYLOR THOMAS LOCKARD A WILLIAM E. McCULLOH Chairman. Department of Classics SYLVIA E. BARNARD -w i-ci i «ia classics WILLIAM BROWN economics WII.I.IAM SHYMOUR RICHARD DYE BRUCE L. GENSEMER PAUL M. TITUS iiiwi 1 m - f,'- rt • . •.-• r ■ ••• jnS i -a . - . DOUGI AS JOHNSON ROBERT KOE TIMOTHY HOLDER JOHN DAHNE U-- •_■vi-j:. — HOWARD MIMUS RICHARD NOI AN ai an rothi-:nbi:kg DAVID MORSE I AWRENCE SCHMIDLAPP - 1 economics HARRY UTSUMI ARTHUR STROYD MICHAEL SMITH CHARLES WILLIAMS THEODORE STEBBINS HARRY TATGENHORST german BRUCE HAYWOOD EDMUND P. HECHT Chairman. Department of German EDWARD HALLOWELL CHRISTOPHER BRIGGS 158 french ROBERT H. GOODHAND Chairman. IXpartmeni of French B. PETER SEYMOUR WILLIAM KONRAD E. HAM 11.TON K1LLEN, JR. Spanish GLORIA WEBER JAMES R. BROWNE JOHN GAZLAY Chairman. Department of Spanish ROBERT L. BAKER Chairman. Department of History 160 V H. LANDON WARNER MICHAEL J. EVANS : KAI P. SCHOENHALS FRANK E. BAILEY history 163 history political ciencc PETER FOURT JAMES CEASER II ■ ■ ■ I. 1 1 III IP CERNY HARRY M. CLOR THEODORE CARLSON .. . [ . 9 1 ' 1 1 1 1,111 1 political science RONALD K. McCLARHN EUGENE HARLEY CYRUS W. HANNINC. Chairman. Department of Philosophy 170 MICHAEL CLARK DAVID MUNCiER ! • -,« v’+ r t ' ■••riTr .• railfctfrftVi} ft ■• e ■•• religion RICHARD F. HETTLINGER Chairman. Department of Religion ALAN SHAVZIN DONALD L. R(XiAN Chaplain of the College religion 172 WOLFGANG J. MITTERMAIER chemistry 174 OWEN YORK. JR Chairman. Department of Chemistry chemistry PAUL A. GWINNER GORDON L. JOHNSON WILLIAM F. BARKER chemistry ■I chemistry 177 WILLIAM C. BLIGHT • 179 35335S25S ■nfanm j-i_i rcr w-i rrri.T7n'l -- ! - -____i____ -r r aimrTx a -y ...------- —mb—W—1 - ■ ■ --■ __ Vi i ____ r i rt?y pfff f ?f i «• f4fv. Wrtrie -i ’+ t -■i'-T biology ________________________i_________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________i___________ ----- ■ - - - NATHAN PARKER DONALD MEACHAM DAVID MOUAT MICH A I-1 WEABEK WILLIAM WATKINS AIAN RADNOR psychology SAMUEL B. CUMMINGS, JR. ROBERT J. WEBER L. THOMAS CLIFFORD Chairman. Department of Psychology ■ ■_______________________________________________________________________________ ROY SCHINDHI HUM psychology STKVF.N NFWCOMB WII HAM I'KRKY JOHN MOOKI T ------ psychology JAMES SNELL CHARLES SCHWARZBECK MARK STENIOWSKI HOWARD PRIC E JAMES RATTRAY M88MlgK5H.i mathematics physics JAMES H. HARROI.D Chairman. Department of Physics LEO H. TAKAHASHI THOMAS B. CREENSLADE, JR. index ANTHONY CHASE ABBOTT Saratoga. California Economics THEODORE ASH ARNOLD Cleveland, Ohio Chemistry JAMES HUBERT BAXTER III Bethesda. Maryland Honors in English, cum laude Sigma Pi. President: Judicial Board; Chase Society. President; Collegian: Macbeth BARRY WILLARD BELLINGER Washington. D.C. Music Chapel Choir; Kenyon Singers: Reveille 66 MICHAEL KENNETH BERRYHILL Houston. Texas High Honors in English, cum laude Hika. Editor WAYNF. DOUGLAS BEVERIDGE Cleveland. Ohio High Honors in Chemistry, magna cum laude Collegian. Business Manager WADE ROBERT BOSLEY Columbus. Indiana English, cum laude DAVID HORN BRADFORD Northlkld. Illinois English Soccer: Tennis; Kenyon Klan: Kenyon Singers: Alpha Delta Phi, Secretary WILLIAM FINLEY BROWN. JR. Lancaster, Ohio Classics, cum laude Football, Captain; Kenyon Klan. Vice- president; Falkcnstinc Award PAUL LOGAN BURKHART Rocky River. Ohio English, cum laude Football RICHARD CLARK CALDWELL Grand Rapids. Michigan English Lacrosse; Chase Society THEODORE DAVID CARLSON Cleveland. Ohio Honors in Political Science Tennis STEPHEN WEBB CARMICHAEL Modesto. California Honors in Biology JAMES WILBUR CEASER Shaker Heights, Ohio Highest Honors in Political Science. summa cum laude PHILIP GEORGE CF.RNY New York. New York Honors in Political Science, cum laude Hockey: Chapel Choir; Collegian. Polit- ical Editor; WKCO WILLIAM MICHAEL CLARK Stockton. California Highest Honors in Philosophy, summa cum laude Ogden Prize; Woodrow Wilson Fellow- ship; Fulbright Fellowship PAUL ROBERT COLE Hamilton. Ohio Honors in English, cum laude RICHARD CLARK CORRELL North Canton, Ohio English CASPER ADAM CROUSE III Tucson. Arizona English, magna cum laude JOHN ERIC DAHNE Larchmont. New York Economics Football, Manager; Kenyon Singers; Chapel Choir: Student Council: Middle Kenyon Association. Social Chairman. President JOHN STEWART DAVIDSON Corry, Pennsylvania English Alpha Sigma Chi. President: Kenyon Klan; Drama Club: IEC ROBERT LIPPARD DAVIDSON. JR. Dayton. Ohio English BRIAN JOHN DERRY Bethesda. Maryland Chemistry Chapel Choir; Football MITCHELL ISAIAH DIAMOND Woodmcrc, New York Biology WARREN BLAINE DIVEN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Economics Collegian. Sports Editor: Lacrosse WILLIAM I EFS DOLWICK Cleveland. Ohio English JEFFREY GRAVES DORRANCI Weston. Massachusetts History Middle Kenyon Association. Treasurer; WKCO MICHAEL BRUCE DUDGEON Mt. Vernon. Ohio Mathematics RICHARD FORSYTHE DYE Cleveland Heights. Ohio Highest Honors in Economics, magna cum laude WILLIAM ROWLAND DYE Wheeling. West Virginia English DAVID WILLIAM FEY. JR Washington. Illinois Religion Arnold Air Society: Red Cross Blood Drive. Chairman: Circle K. President EDWARD JOHN FORREST. JR. Sewicklcy. Pennsylvania Religion Sigma Pi. Vice-president: Kenyon Sing- ers: Collegian. Advertising Manager; Ski Club PETER MORRIS EOURT Alexandria. Virginia Political Science RICHARD GABRIEL FREEMAN Philadelphia. Pennsylvania English, cum laude Collegian. Editor; Young Democrats; Denham Sutcliffe Prize: Student Coun- cil: Committee on Vietnam; Film Soci- ety. Reveille 67. Dalton Fellowship DOUGLAS BRUCF. FRITZ Parma Heights. Ohio Chemistry Senior Society. Proctor LAWRENCE DONALD GALL Lakewood. Ohio High Honors in History, summa cum laude Alan G. Goldsmith Memorial Prize in History; Kenyon Prize Scholarship in History; West German Government Book Award MARK LAWRENCE GARDNER Roselle Park. New Jersey Economics Baseball: Chapel Choir. Brass Choir. Soccer. Chase Society JOHN CHRISTOPHER GAZ1.AY Northvillc. Michigan Spanish Football; Kenyon Singers ROBERT JOSEPH GIBBONS Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Honors in History, cum laude RICHARD SAMUEL GOLOMB Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Biology JAMES MICHAEL GRANDII.I.O Euclid. Ohio English PAUL LIVINGSTONE GRIFFITHS III Wellesley, Massachusetts Economics Arnold Air Society. Commander; Hand- icapped Childrens Swimming Program: AFROTC: Ski Club: Kenyon Singers THOMAS ALLEN GUDINESS Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania History, magna cum laude ROBERT JEAN-STAN LEY GULDEN ET New York. New York History JOHN WOOD HACKWORTH Shclbyvillc. Kentucky History- Chase Society: Freshman Class Presi- dent: Kenyon Christian Fellowship EDWARD ROBERT HALLOW ELL Gladwync. Pennsylvania Highest Honors in German, summa cum laude Gilbert and Sullivan Society. President: Dramatic Club; Hill Players; German Club: Campus Senate: Special Projects Committee: Phi Beta Kappa. Timbcrlake Prize: Paul Newman Prize: Ashford Cup: Fulbright Fellowship; Woodrow Wilson Fellowship 189 index EUGENE NELSON HARLEY New York. New York Philosophy, cum laude NORMAN CLYDE HARTSEL North Olmstcad, Ohio Chemistry Phi Kappa Sigma. Pledgemastcr; Chase Society; Wrestling; Kenyon Klan DAVID ALLAN HASP.ROT I akewood. Ohio Political Science Delta Tan Delta. Secretary REED GARRETI HPNNINGPR III Riverside. Illinois History Psi Upsilon. Treasurer. Social Chairman; TNE JOHN WILLIAM HESLOP Akron, Ohio History, cum laude FREDERICK PKLOT HUSTON III Cranford. New Jersey Honors in Mathematics, cum laude CRAIG RUSSELL JACKSON I ongmeadow. Massachusetts English RONALD FREDERICK JAVORCKY Lakewood. Ohio Honors in English, cum laude DOUGLAS VAN DER VEER JOHNSON Glen Ellyn. Illinois Economics Merit List; Delta Phi. Secretary GEORGE THOMAS JONES III Plainfield. Illinois English Alpha Sigma Chi. President; Circle K; I EC; Collegian GEORGE KAITSA. JR Sandusky, Ohio Economics Alpha Lambda Omega. Treasurer; Ski Club; Kenyon Singers; Circle K. Presi- dent; Project Headstart MICHAEL PAUL KIRCHBERGER New York. New York English, cum laude Hika, Editor; Reveille 67 ROBERT EDWARDS KOE Santurce, Puerto Rico Economics Delta Tau Delta. President; Football; Kenyon Klan; I EC ALLAN S. KOHRMAN Shaker Heights. Ohio Honors in History, cum laude Senior Class President; Gilbert and Sul- livan Society WII LIAM ROSS KONRAD Milwaukee. Wisconsin Honors in French, cum laude THOMAS EDWARD LAD Cleveland. Ohio Honors in Chemistry, cum laude Lacrosse. Co-captain; Brass Choir; Chase Society; Kenyon Klan JOHN FLEMING LANDIS Dayton. Ohio H istory KIT ALBERT LANDIS Fresno. California English DAVID PAUL LANE Houllon. Maine English, cum laude TIMOTHY JAMSEN LANG Conneaut. Ohio Chemistry RICHARD HENRY LEE Massapequa. New York English HOWARD ALAN LEVY Shaker Heights, Ohio High Honors in English, magna cum laude FLOYD SANFORD LINTON Sclaukcl. New York Honors in English WILLIAM FRANKLIN LIPMAN Toledo. Ohio High Honors in Mathematics, cum laude JOHN THOMASLOCKARD Westlake. Ohio Music, cum laude ROBERT CARRUTHERS MARTIN III Cos Cob. Connecticut History GEORGE ALLEN MeDOUGALL. JR. St. Paul. Minnesota Biology EDGAR ROBINSON MeGUIRE II BulTalo. New York Drama Drama Club. President; Alpha Sigma Chi. President; Student Council; Film Society; Film Workshop DONALD FREDERICK MEACHAM Royal Oak. Michigan Biology HOWARD GREGORY MILIUS Cranford. New Jersey Economics JEREMIAH SALTONSTALI MILLER Bridgehampton. New York English Soccer; Hockey; Chase Society: Kenyon Klan: Chapel Choir: Chasers; Delta Kappa Epsilon. Social Chairman JOHN CARTER MOORE Clayton. Missouri Psychology Swimming: Tennis DAVID STEPHEN MORSE East Liverpool. Ohio Economics DOUGLAS ROSS MORTON. JR. Elgin. Illinois High Honors in Chemistry, magna cum laude Phi Kappa Sigma. President; Track; Kenyon Klan: Chapel Choir WILLIAM DAVID MOUAT. JR Roslyn. Pennsylvania Biology, cum laude PAUL DAVID MUNGER Bloomington. Indiana Philosophy Swimming. Captain: Arnold Air Society. Executive Officer: Kenyon Singers; Jun- ior Class President: Kenyon Klan MAYNARD HALE MURCH IV Willoughby. Ohio Political Science Beta Theta Pi. President: IFC. President; Reveille 66. Business Manager; Chase Society; Swimming; Track; Rotary Scholarship Award; Flying Club STEVEN JOHN NEWCOMB Cincinnati. Ohio Psychology Brass Ensemble: Kenyon Ski Team; Kenyon Singers RICHARD THOMAS NOLAN Chappaqua. New York Economics DENNIS CHARLES O’CONNE! I Pound Ridge. New York P'i Upsilon. Social Chairman; Collegian. Advertising Manager JOHN LEE OTIS Cleveland. Ohio Biology, cum laude NATHAN NEF.LY PARKER Norcross. Georgia Biology Soccer; Track; Kenyon Singers WILLIAM ALLAN PERRY IV Glen Head. New York Psychology Dean’s List; Soccer; Chase Society. Kenyon Klan ROBERT RAY PIPER. JR. West Alexandria. Ohio History WILLARD JEROME PUGH III Painesville. Ohio Honors in Religion, cum laude Football: Basketball; Baseball; Kenyon Christian Fellowship. Drama Club; Chap- el Choir; Philosophy Club ALAN TOBY RADNOR University Heights. Ohio Biology JAMES DOUGLAS RATTRAY. JR Port Ewen. New York Psychology Bela Theta Pi. Social Chairman: Foot- ball; Wrestling: Lacrosse. Co-Captain; Kenyon Klan; Kenyon Singers CARL FRANKLIN RAYHER Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Political Science, cum laude Swimming: Delta Phi. Scholarship Chairman ROGER LEE REYNOLDS Lexington. Kentucky Highest Honors in English, magna cum laude West German Government Book Award; Drama Club: Delta Kappa Epulo - Treasurer 190 index LEWIS DAVID RICH Bethesda. Maryland Political Science PHILIP STEVENS RINALDO III Downers Grove. Illinois English Edgar Collins Bogardus Poetry Prize: IIIKA. Associate Editor JAMES ARTHUR ROBINSON Chagrin Falls. Ohio Honors in English. Summa cum laude Senior Society; Drama Club; Student Council: Phi Kappa Sigma. Correspond- ence Secretary THOMAS BYRON ROSS South Euclid. Ohio English, magna cum laude WKCO: Collegian: Delta Phi. Secretary AI AN EDWARD ROTHF.NBERG Wheeling. West Virginia Economics WKCO: College Social Committee. Chairman; Peirce Hall Co-Ordinator; Calandcr Planning Committee. Sec. STEPHEN EDWARD RUDOLPH Cleveland. Ohio Honors in Chemistry, cum laude ALAN WILLIAM RYAN Maplewood. New Jersey Economics, cum laude Delta Phi. Treasurer MARK DAVID SAVIN Highland Park. Illinois Highest Honors in English, cum laude WILLIAM CHARLES SCAR West Newton. Massachusetts Art. cum laude Drama Club; Kenyon Singers; Koko- singers; Swim Team; Kenyon Art Guild; Gilltcrt Sullivan Society; Chase Society ROY HOWARD SCHINDELHEIM New York City. New York Psychology, cum laude LAWRENCE COOPER SCHMIDLAPP Oyster Bay. New York Economics BILL STUART SCHNALL Hewlett. L.I.. New York Highest Honors in Biology, magna cum laude Campus Senate. Secretary; Student Council; Planning Committee Chairman; Director. Christmas Admissions Pro- gram; Proctor; Columbia University Book Prize: Anderson Cup RICHARD DOUGLAS SCHUBART Gettysburg. Pennsylvania History CHARLES SCHWARZBECK III Amityville. New York Psychology Swimming: Football: Soccer; Bela Theta Pi. Social Chairman: Prc Med. Club; Operation Head Start. Psychology Publi- cations Award WILLIAM EDWARD SEYMOUR III Sharon. Massachusetts Highest Honors in Economics, magna cum laude Collegian; Hockey Club; Sigma Pi. President JOSEPH ERIC SIMON Cleveland. Ohio Highest Honors in Mathematics, magna cum laude MICHAEL EDWARD SMITH Yardlcy. Pennsylvania Economics, cum laude Baseball; Student Council: AEROTC. Commander; Phi Kappa Sigma. Secre- tary. Vice-President: Arnold Air Society: Chase Society; WKCO: Kenyon Klan JAMES WILLIAM SNELL Libcrtyvillc. Illinois Psychology Chase Society: Kenyon Singers; Middle Kenyon Association. Vice-President CLIFFORD HAROLD SPOHR Kcnmore. New York Honors in Chemistry, magna cum laude THEODORE ERASER STEBBINS l.yndhurst. Ohio Economics Delta Phi. President: IFC. President MARK VICTOR STENIOWSKI New York. New York Psychology MARKHAM PETER STEVENSON Barto. Pennsylvania English Reveille JOHN WILLIAM STEWART. JR Bradley. Illinois History STEPHEN GARRETT STONFHOUSE Ligonicr. Pennsylvania Political Science Football; Hoag Sportsmanship Award; Student Council: Social Committee: Beta Theta Pi. Vice-President; Chase Society: Operation Headstart TURNER MINOR STRAEFFER Louisville. Kentucky History DONALD ARTHUR STRAWHACKER. JR. Parma Heights. Ohio English, cum laude ARTHUR HEISTFR ST ROY D. JR Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Economics Student Council: Chapel Choir: Della Kappa Epsilon. Rush Chairman CHARLES JOHNSON TAGGART Canton. Ohio Honors in History, magna cum laude Collegian: Junior Class Secretary ROBERT BARRY TATGENHORST Louisville. Kentucky Economics JOSEPH DALE TERRENCE Albany. New York History STEPHEN TORMEY Beverly. Massachusetts History, tum laude MICHAEL LAWRENCE ULREY Mt. Vernon. Ohio High Honors In Mathematics, cum laude Proctor Gamble Scholarship; Wres- tling; Football; Chemical Rubber Com- pany Award in Physics: Proctor BARRY MOKE UTSUMI Honolulu. Hawaii Economics, cum laude Alpha Lambda Omega, President; IFC ROSS CHARLES VAN RIPER Hinsdale. Illinois English LEE PAUL VAN VORIS Lewiston. New York Honors in Biology, cum laude Spanish Prize Scholarship; Track, Co- captain: Football: Kenyon Klan. Presi- dent; Campus Senate: Chase Society; Senior Society; Kenyon Singers; Proctor; Kokosingcrx: Alpha Delta Phi. Treasurer DAVID LOUIS VAUGHN Bloomington. Indiana English KARL EDWARD WAGNER Knoxville. Tennessee Honors in History, cum laude Perspective. Co-editor: Collegian: Archon. President JOSEPH WAI.DSTEIN Brockton. Massachusetts History, magna cum laude ROGER GLENN WALLACE Fairvicw Park. Ohio Honors in Political Science Phi Kappa Sigma. President; IFC; Kenyon Singers: Brass Choir WILLIAM DOUGLAS WATKINS Birmingham. Michigan Biology RONALD CARL WEINGRAD Hillsdale. New Jersey Political Science STEPHEN SHEPARD WERTH Wmnctka. Illinois English HOWARD HAAS WHITE Bridgevillc. Pennsylvania History CHARI ES ALBERT SYMMES WILLIAMS Marietta. Ohio Economics Football; Track. Co-captain: Kenyon Klan MICHAEL ANTHONY WISE Hinsdale. Illinois History Golf DOUGLAS BARRY WOOD Honolulu. Hawaii Psychology Kenyon Singers. Lacrosse; Judicial Board; Kenyon Klan; Proctor; AFROTC. Cadet Commander: Arnold Air Society. Treas- urer WARREN KENT WOWCZUK Parma. Ohio English 191 Mr. H. Appleton Mr. Mrs. F. W. licllingcr Mr. Mrs. Isadorc Burdinc William G. Caplcs Dr. Wm. B. Chamberlin. Jr. William E. Clcss Mr. Mrs. B. B. Denniston Mr. Mrs. A. M. Dye H. C. Fhrenwerth Dr. Mrs. Richard France Mr. Mrs. Frank Grum Graham Gund Mr. Mrs. A. M. Halpcrn Mr. Mrs. Reed G. Henninger Mika Mr. Mrs. I. Horowitz William Kalmbach Joseph L. Lavicri. Sr. Richard H. Ixc Mr. Mrs. Norman Levey Mr. Mrs. Hubert H. Marty Mr. Mrs. William R. Miller James R. Morrell Dr. Mrs. Douglas Morton George B. Murphy, Inc. Mr. Mrs. Frederick Osbom, Jr. I . S. Rinaldo, Jr. Charles Rotbart Fdmund P. Scarlett Robert A. Weaver Dorsey Ycarlcy Editors note: Reveille 67 is lithographed in charcoal black ink by the University Press, Win. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. The paper stock is 80 pound Warren Velva Dull, and the book is set in 8 and 10 point 'l imes Roman type. The cover fabric is 2 x 2 Natural Monkscloth and the cover design was borrowed from the windows of Chase Tower. The bindery is Riverside Bookbinders in Rochester, New York. Reveille 67 is printed in an edition of 800 copies. The editor would like to extend his appreciation to the following individuals for their understanding and encouragement during the production of the book: Philip Church, Galbraith Crump. Thomas Edwards, Gerrit Roelofs. Peter Seymour. We would also like to thank John Landry and the staff at Wm. J. Keller Inc. for their invaluable assistance and cooperation which have greatly facilitated the printing of Reveille 67. Advertising: Jon Kaufman, Drew Peretzky, Robert Schaffncr, Gregory Sheldon, David Wallace. Photography: George Berndt. William Dye, Lawrence Gale, Yale Greenfield. Kurt Lorenz. Richard Nolan, Tony Olbrich. Drew Peretzky, Philip Rinaldo, Robert Schonfcld, Markham Stevenson. Fraternity photographs were taken by Dick Nolan and arranged by Mack Haning who acted as Activities Coordinator. Sports copy was written by Rick Freeman, Craig Jackson and Gene Harley. The drawings and advertising section were designed by Greg Spaid. Assisting the editors was Daniel Reasor. REVEILLE DANIEL HOROWITZ. Editor YALE GREENFIELD, Associate Editor ROBERT SCHAFFNER, Accounts 200 5 ■ . . - K. tSh at: r;t' • • 31 cnstt rr iitz?'' ?, :h -. • I- ,v-' 3$$’ !■!.., H “Xitl'sTT ' ip35C.,,,; --y . -.J K - • tit-1 vx ; r4 X • w r.£SH r T • tC-t ■ZTl..


Suggestions in the Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) collection:

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Kenyon College - Reveille Yearbook (Gambier, OH) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970


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