an au
COLLEGE
PUBLISHED T
WESTERVILLE, OHIO, MAY 8, 1922.
VOL. 5.
JUNIOR-FRESHMAN Calvin S. Coolidg~ To ~peak. j Yice-Pn:siden t Coolidge will addre s BANQUET ENJ OYED the student body next Monday night
Mother's Day Service at Y. M.
No. 28.
MIAMI TRIUMPHS TE IS MEN WI
Mother's Day will be the sub ject -for discussion at Y. M . C. A., Thursday under the· au pices of th e "Harding's night. John Geo rge is th e leader. Thursday's Joyous Tennis Win Is Class of '25, Plays Host to '23 W i th , Own Club,'' Otterb ein's on ly political Every one who holds a warm place in Overshadowed by Friday's Well-appointed Banquet In Classic club. The general pub li c i invited to his heart for his mother be there. Baseball Bereavement. • soc1·al Events • hear Mr. Coolidge. bu t all students will of Y ears . . Music Lecture to be Given. oi co urse be particularly interested m W O LF BEATS O TTERBEIN hi me age. BANQUET HALL PACKED On Thursday afternoon, May 11 , at 4 ·00 p. m., as a part of the regular Hancock Performs Well on Mound F. E. McGuire Presiding as Toast Otterbein Men Help. work of the Mu ic D epartment, ProBut the Jinx of O ld is too M uch master Keeps Program Moving , Otte rb ein was rep rc ented at three fes or McCloy will give the third of a ' for Game's W elfare. ___ high choo l oratorical con te t s in the series of lectures on the phenomena Fast-Decorations are Beautiful tale la t Friday night. Professor of sound in his lecture room in McOtterbein came within an ac of th . And, behold, the day ca°:1e and , e Smith, Professor Spes ard and H . V. Fadden Hall. The students in music keepi ng the week' port late clean 23 tun e now wa that the trib e of · Troop acted a judges at tlanta, a re required to attend this lecture, the during the week-end. The ace wa prond hould go fort h in fes tal array a ·ewark, and Delaware re pecti ely. public invited . duced last Friday by a well known banquet with its brothers of the f Miami athleto, Wolf by name, who i O tribe of '25. For, behold, hera ld ~ in the habit of "gumming the detail" '25 had pread about through all the ·d· f ~ for 0. C. team . land and had proclaimed the ti mgs O The tenni men tarted things off the festivitie . right on Thur day by humbling MusAnd the day wa Ul the ide of May lci1 gum in the net game and nothing in the year of oar Lord, one th ousan~, Rut Otterbein' u ual "hard lines" nine hundred and twenty-two. A nd it ruined the beauty of a perfect pa tirne. wa the morning and the evening of Miami 3, Otterbein 2. the econd day. Coming to bat in the ninth with the nd lo a evening ap_proached th e score two to one against him, with two maid ns oI the two tribes did array do" n, ne on, and t o trike called, the.m selve in gorgeou color., bo h that joy killer, the same man, with the silk and atin and even georgette and fitting name-Wolf, who scored two organdie and on their faces some did touchdown against Otterbein in put paint and fragra nt powder and football la t fall, met one of "Hank's" strenuously did they struggle with twisters and knocked the horse hide out cor age pins until at last safely and of the lot. That i the salient featu r e securely anchored were the immen e of a game of spill d joy. The fact that armfuls of Ophelias and American Otterbein wa enjoying a perfectly Beautie , and in more remote corners good game of ball, an usually high of the land the air did become blue and cla s college game up to that time, swains did cuss glibly in vain en count for naught when that deed is deavors to make those dress suits fit . con idered. But all thes e trials did pass away Same Old Jinx. and the Dean did for a long time hear Otterbein played good ball, heady a sound a of many feet and the ani ball. The game was all but won; a mals did come out two by two. nd score of rooters were all set for a it came to pass that they did come to mad dash to the college bell where a th e banquet hall where marvelou Court sy olumbus Dispatch. " rim cracking" wa to have taken B. 0 .HANBY thing had been done. Like a great To be able to eel brate the Dia- money f r the sup port of the in titu- place, when th?.t ever present demon garden did it appear and behold they (Continued on page six.) mon d Ju b liee of an educational in- tion when the future looked black, (Continued on page eight.) th stitution a1id to have one of _ c two di ma l and hopeless. It was he, who Baseball Rally Rouses Pep. fi r t graduatrng class . S cience Cl u b Meets· 111cm b r s o f the . h b . with two other men, served as trusPep reached uch a high ten ion at . I t partake 111 t e ce 1e ration j The regular monthly meetrng df ti c ~) re se nt 0 . of Otterb('in tee at the founding of the college in the rally Thursday night that it ex . . 1 . ciencc lub wa held Mondar eve•: ~ 1. th c umq~: _p;:~ g M. Han by of i 47, an_d cho e the name_ Otterbein a ploded and blew Miami to splinter allege. M · · .f •a the olde t mo t u1ta bl<; for the Umted Brethren and like the fabled Phoenix, D ean Up~ tng at 7 :30 in Profe or Wemland s . Lagum a Beach a 1• orru , d f h' l'f recitation room. . . ' 0f ·uerbein and a schoel. He devote most o 1s I e on ro e from the ruins and led the The meeting was called to or~er ltnng graduhat~ t Otterbein graduat- to the up-building of the college. Otterbein rooters in a roaring "Yea and bu ine s conducted after whi ch I membe r of t ed r .d f Beni· amin I Closely allied to the early hi tory of Otterbein." las an w1 ow o , . . . n • ' th of Darling I Otterbem came the publication of Profe sor Hanawalt wa there and t h e club enjoyed a very fi ne prograi mg . . . .fi . I II nby who was au or . . G d consisting of three sc1ent1 c paper · a h d her desire Darl rng Nellie ray compose by m tructed everyone in base ball Ian' !lie Gray as expres e . . . 11·1 en Eleanor Whitney gave a paper - 1 <' • •' f tt ding the fe ti- Beniar111n Hanby m 1 56 w I e a guage, and Profe sor Brady said he ha en •t Her son ophomore in Otterbein. Hi deep could'nt tell a story but we know titled "Chemicat Analy is in Re · pect to ancl intention . . b h. , f if her hea 1t perm1 . ' I·t roge n" vi.(ic L00d control. "Reaction o di f the "Unafraid sympathy for the slave 1s aid y I better. He wins the oyster. t Was di cus ed by A. E. Roose. ForeS B. O . Hanby, fe Mtor ~Ind 15 • widow to h'ave in oired thi ong The "Dixie Quartette" brought t · v ernon, ·• O th er down the house. Valentine gave a discussion o f " oa I R epu bl'ica n". o w h'ic h 1·ives on Wt'th our Caruso never sang . . ti pecttng to be pn:sent. T ar Colors" After the program 1 e a I O ex famous f h . P William songs of that period of history. like it did. It was a good rally but His grand at er, 8 is 110 0 b . h ' . . . . f I eetI cub adiourned from its orma m f th pillars of the If we students at tter em can see ere s one sugge lion. If you come 0 ing and enjoyed a short ocial tim e. Hanby, was on:. e It was he who the privilege that is ours in being per- to the rally ·come into the chapel. Sandwiches and coffee were ~rvcd olleg_ s ea;ty fi. •~~ory.th e first financi- mitted to see the widow of Ren Hanby, Don't stay out in the hall and rai e a d llected none of us will mi s Commencement. di turbance. in a true scient'ific way and were n• went into t e . e ba . . . I agent of 0 tter em an co Joyed immensely. a 1
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w1·dow of Ben Hanby .and Onl y Son Desire to Attend Big Jubilee b=================~============;;:;;;,
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