1922 03 06 The Tan and Cardinal

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!TRLlSHED f~ THE I TEREST OF OTTERBEIN COLLEGE WESTERVILLE, OHIO, MARCH 6, 1922.

VOL. 5.

No. 21.

' FIFTH NU_ M _ B_E_R COMING ! COUNCIL TAKES ACTION ILUTHERANS WIN DEBATERS LOSE Company To Appear Resolutions Affecting Initiations and , F ROM OTTERBEIN BOTH CQ TESTS I Irene OnStolofsky Lecture Course, Friday School P in Are Passed by Capital Is Too Fast For Otterbein S tudent Council. Night. Heidelberg and Ohio Nor thern Win Quintet at Colwnbus Both Decisions In First - The fifth number of the Cit izen,' 1 \V edncsday even ing the Student Game. Forensic Clash. Lecture Co uf'ic will he gi\'en in th e I Cn un cil too k important action in re­ Co llege Chapel next friday c, ening gc1rcl to Social Clubs living up to the CRAB~S STARS FOR 0. C . CLOSED SHOP DEBATED March 10. .'t11cl ent Constit ution. whi ch stipulates The Iren e Stolofsky Company i, that every membe r of a . ocial club I Final Score Stands 34-17-Special Otterbein Teams Seriously Handicap­ the ol'tstancling musical_ numl!er 011 mu ~t be a n activ_e member of a literary J Cars Carry Students to ped By Lack Of Sufficient th is year·s schedule. Mi ss Stolofsky . soc1_ety befo re. h1s or her fourth semes- j Game. a violinist, has studied und er Hugh ter 111 Otterbem. In as much as there Preparation. Diamond. of Chicago and she attrib- i, laxness in obse rving this law, the I La t ,•·eek " we a keel a young cha1J For the fir t time since the ,·ar an utcs much of her success to thi form- , Counc1-1 d ec1c • 1e d that all social club to write up the 13luffton cont es t, ai1d · d b t team was de fea ted tt er b em c a c er conce rtmaster of the Chicago ym- mu _t comply to this law by the 20th he started off by co ntr a ting th ~ g ame at home when Heidelberg's ,·cteran phony Orchestra. he is well kn own 01 :\larch or be subj ec t to the c!isciaffirmative team earned a decision with an l ngersoll movement. someto loca l people. having appeared here pline of th e Council. ql1acl in time . fast a1icl ometimcs slow. If a Over th e Ott c rb eu· 1 11egat1·ve . . . las t summer, and all are united in Standard Pin Adopted. . . . . . h . • r -t f Tl St d C . d similar charactcnzat1on should be the college chapel last F nday cvc11111g. .. I ay m"' t _a_t s 11e 1s a v10 1111s o excep1e u e~t ounc1 1 a 1so reso 1ve made thi s week we should have t 0 ay . , In Alfred Buehler (capt.), Wilh I tional ab1hty and power. that Otterbem readopt the stan dard .h O . d Ed. B . s Heidel . . - h · • . . t at tter 1)em s part looked more like M at h 1as, an 1son O\\ er • As I tmg Miss Stolofsky I Gracc sc ool pm which was 111 n e up until h . . berg presented a trio of men which John so n K onold. soprano, who has 1916, and that thi s pin be u ed by the an eig t clay clock wil h its natural · 0 C, · ex . . · 1 -ses from year to year, . tru'gg lef to keep .up . the regular time was sup~no r to . . s more 111 - tudied under de Reszke 111 Pans and various ca · · t Fo Otter. . h Just 1)e o re a rew111d111g. penenced negative earn. r Saenger 111 N"ew York. The thir d merely c angmg the numerals each · . quality . orga111zat1on • • • year . Th'1s pm · 1s • s1m1 • -1ar to the one The b m, not one o f th e n egative team.' m ember of this 1s . game . wa n't . slow nece . arity o n eil h er ide. Capi~al's pa smg w~s composed of Virgil E. Myers, John (. an accomplished piano soloi t and c1dop ted by the ' class of '23. Mayne, and Leonard 0 . Perry, h_ad accompani t . Initiations Regulated. about as c_lever a p1~ce of work ~s ever previou ly participated in at fo Jo,· r f th coll , and tb r of ial club in.iti- we have sed ~hi eason. This ter-coll gial d bate. town are assur d au v niog of tin ation was d cid d whc,n tb Council c1odd hoc ea ily attn~ut~. to t~ fact • • t1at t -:y were playing m their own · ·d · • • d R Th e que. t1on under con 1 erat1on, entertamment. passc a eso 1ution which read a folh Resolved : That the a!}plication oi th e --------lows: where most_ of them have played principle of the closed union shop Attendance At 0 . C. Growing"Whereas-: Initiation may be of in- romf t :ee tofeight y_ears, a nd were · f h \ cl f • per orm111g be ore their home crowd wou ld best serve the mtere• t o t e Will Double In Five Years · terest an to the. mem- w h'1c h a 1ways lend ze t to a home b f ho importance • . e_r. o _ t _a_t . oc1al Club which the team American peopl , was log1cally pretile ented by the vi itors . The OtterLate~t figures from college 1r:1tiate 1s Jo111111g, but are of no special · bein men put up a determined office place the total en rollment of the in.tere t or importa,1 ce to the chool at k ra b bs 1:1.ade a de perate effort lo re istance and until the last of the student body at 503. Of that num- large. and indeed, may often become . eep up with the ~uth_e rans, by_ co,' b 391 are members of the four col bl . · mg over the charity line h ean11g 1·11 rebuttal specche they eemed to have er, . - a pu 1c nm ance. . . ' an even hance with the up- tate men. Iege cla e ' 146 bemg Fre hmen. ResolYed : That no public initiation ten pom~ out of thirteen efforts. but (Continued on page two.) At the rate of growth of the past shall be allowed'. The word "public the ap'.tlll boys were hardly rough _ _ _.... . ____ two years, the enrollment of the four initiation s" hall not mean out ide in- enough lo. afford the young ter TO HOLD PUBLIC MEETING college classes would reach 825, and itiations. but rather any initiation (Colltrnued on page two.) the to ta l enrollment would be well , hich i de igned to attract unusual INTEREST IS GROWING over 1000 within five years or by Feb- attention from unin1ere ted ner on . . • All S tudents Urged To A tten d C 1t1.zen., ruary, 1927. To accommodate that Out ide initiations hall be allowed. · Id b , Alumna! Orgaru·zations Are Increasship Meeting-Professors to number of stu d ent it wou e nece - (Thi re 9Iution hall not effect the ing and Greater D esire to Co­ Speak. ary to increase the number of build- t ditional initiation of the arsity operate is· )Manifested ing to fifteen and o double the num- "0").

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Under the au pice of the Depart­ ment 0£ Chri tian Citizen hip of the \, e terville W. . T. U. cooperating with the Brotherhoods and the en' Bible Cla es of tbe town cburche and the local unit of Boy cou\s, a meeting will be held T1,1esday night-, March 7, at 7:SO in the ethodist Church. Dr. E. A. Jone will make an ad-· dre s on the subject "The onstitution of th.e United . tates," after which Dr. arles navcly will conduct an open di cu ion, an wering- aU question relative to that ubject. Tb aim of the promoter of this meeting i t foster th growth . 0£ b tter citizen hip. Every colle e stu.de.nt bould take an interest in that program, c rtainly, a many tterb in students as can s hould attend 'thi meeting.

ber oi the pre e.nt faculty. Librarians Rearrange Books. For the la t month Miss Barnes and Mi Lafever college librarian , with Mr. avidson, library janitor, helping, have b en at work rearranging ai:id cleanin the tack rooms of the library. Every book in the stack ha. been du ted and moved. It ha b en a long tire ome grind for the library force, but as a re ult the s ack room better arrang d than ever b fore. Th Philomathean and Philophroncan Jibrarie have been mov d up stair , and the college library start up­ tairs. All he lower floor is taken up by th colleg library arranged in pr per order. Miss Barne state that th librarian 'will willingly and cheer­ fully explain the n w arra ngement to anyone who de ire the information.

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It wa · plained regarding thi re olution .that it is not designed to cut out daytim in'tiation , but rather to minimize humiliating and annoying public practices, which includes, of course, the app arance of. initiates at chapel and cla while grotesquely clothed. Far East Problem Intere ting. of th I nterna:tional Re­ lation Clup were treated to an un­ u ua't producti n last Monday night in the for of a paper "Japan's In ter­ e ts on the Continen~ cu A ia", by R G. Ander on. The dub' tudy of the Far Ea t que tion grows more inter­ e ting \vith each ucceeding meetin~. The main pape.r :(or n xt !londay nights m e ting will be "England's In­ terest in the Far Ea t" by Warren Cogan.

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The college office i makin a cial effort Lhi year to kc p in e touch with all Otterbein ah1mna l ociations that are already in . i _ cc and at the ame time i en­ ragin in ever)I way ~e formation 1e, alumna! or ani.zatio even a handful f grad tud n are · · vithin make g to ibility. Much of the succe o tb Di mond Juhil e ampaign rest oo the alum nal as ociation throughout th cow1try, and with this in mind Pr · ~ dent Clipping r, tdg tber ·with Field Repre cntativ Phillips and f:h r t, _ pre e.ntative , h e. in their appearance before alumnaJ r aui?:atio mpha iz d th ne d of CQ-0p rati : . (Continu d on page five.)


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