St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH)

 - Class of 1925

Page 61 of 92

 

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 61 of 92
Page 61 of 92



St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 60
Previous Page

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 62
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 61 text:

I Sl :I H I ' If I BE I - 3562 FROM FAR AND NEAR L I JE I It I I I I ll JM And now the honorable Doctor Eliot of Harvard has come out with his views on the immigration question. According to the doc- tor the unassimilable races are the Jews and -the Irish! To think, my dear Americans, that through all these years the safety buildings of Boston and New York have been the arsenals and rendezvous for hordes of armed aliensl ls it not a shudder-causing cogitation? This statement of Doctor Eliot, however. has been the cause of another of life's little ironies. For lo, who but the dear old World's Work itself should come out in defense of the Catholic Irish. The reason: the Irish, plague take them, happen to fall ethnically in the W. W.'s pet Anglo-Saxon or Nordic race. The periodical begins by admitting that perhaps the Irish have not been absorbed so well as men of other nationalities that come in the Nordic group. Facts show this, it is admitted. But, maintains the magazine. this condition is not due to any inherent unassim- ilability, but rather to the policy of the Cath- olic hierarchy, which frowns on any inter- marriage with Protestants. lf the time ever comes, the article concludes, when Protes- tants and Catholics can marry as freely as do the members of the several Protestant sects, then that separateness of which Doctor Eliot complains will end. In the first place, it might profitably be asked in what does Americanism consist. Is it necessarily a losing of all race identity? Is it the dropping of all previous character- istics, and being refashioned in a kind of a standard mould? Or does it not rather con- sist in an attitude, an approval of America's ideals and a strong determination to live worthy of them and to do what one can to further them? Again, in reply to the sug- gestion made by World's Work, it is a ques- tion whether a change in the sentiment of the Catholic Church toward mixed marriages would work for the happiness of this country. It might do something toward the further assimilation of the Irish-if that be a good. But if we are to judge by past experience of such marriages it would also result in an in- crease of marital unhappiness-and that is an evil which is already so great that the very existence of this country is threatened by it. Doctor Eliot is also authority for the state- ment that love at Erst sight is the best and truest kind. This department does not feel called upon to make any comments. An article by Father Ryan of Catholic University appearing in the Catholic World for May holds much that is of interest to col- legians, ex-collegians, and non-collegians. As its title it proposes the much-mooted question: Do the Prohibition Laws Bind in Con- science? It meets the issue frankly, and settles it with a finality that is characteristic of Father Ryan. A Let us quote from the concluding para- graphs: The Eighteenth Amendment, writes Father Ryan, and those provisions of the Volstead Act which forbid the sale of intoxicating liquor and which prohibit action involved in, or immediately connected with, the sale of intoxicating liquors are binding in conscience .... All these prohibitions are binding in conscience because they are neither unjust nor construable as 'purely penal' legislation. On the other hand, the non-commercial and private manufacture, possession, and transportation of liquor for consumption by one's self or one's friends, remain lawful in the field of conscience and morality. The provisions of the Volstead Act which pro-

Page 60 text:

42 THE OZANAM The affair was well attended and everyone enjoyed themselves thoroughly. It is these kind of projects that will serve to build up a new spirit of appreciation between the stu- dents of both schools. The annual alumni banquet was a very auspiciious gathering of over two hundred members and friends. It is very evident that the association is developing new energy by the real spirit that was displayed on this even- ing of February I4. The addresses and other entertainments were worthy of a greater St. John's. The College debated in a new field this year as a result of the formation of the Ohio- Michigan Debating Conference. Two de- bates were held with Toledo University, of which St. John's lost one and won the other: two debates with Bluffton had the same results. On Wednesday, March 25, the Ozanam Debating Society was honored with the pres- ence of Rt. Rev. Bishop Stritch. At the invitation of the Vocational committee, the Bishop gave an informal talk on the dignity and nobility of the priesthood. He appealed to the students to think of this high vocation when considering their state of life. The public presentation of the Dramatic Society this year was Seven Keys to Bald- pate. This famous Cohan success was well received by packed houses on the evenings of April I7 and I8. at the Ursuline Audito- rium. The social activities of the school were eclipsed by the formal Junior Prom. which took place Friday evening, May 8. Stu- dents, Alumni and their friends revelled in the art of terpsichore engulfed in an atmos- phere of rhythm which only Frederick Sey- mour and his associate players can create. From nine till one the Woman's Building was the scene of one of the most pleasant dancing parties of the season. And this ambitious pro- ject, the first of its kind attempted at St. John's, has set a high standard for the future. City-wide interest in our College was brought about for an ever memorable ten-day period, during the famous moustache contest in which the members of the Senior class were the entrants. On Friday, May 15, ten youths laid aside their razors and none of the ten upper lips knew the touch of steel until noon on May 25. Every man in the race had the beginnings of an item of adornment while Mr. Urban L. Pilliod was awarded the trophy as the winner of the classic. Much publicity was given this event by the Toledo newspapers. L. F. C.



Page 62 text:

44 THE OZANAM hibit these actions are not binding in con- science because they constitute unjust inter- ference with personal liberty. The purchaser, he goes on to state, is re- garded as co-operating with the seller, and for this reason he is a participant with the latter in moral guilt. This, however, is not necessarily a grave sin. To sum it all up fwith apologies to Father Ryanj--Every man his own brewer and the bootlegger be di. A recent survey of the best sellers of the first quarter of the twentieth century in America, made by Publishers' Weekly CNew Yorkl, reveals that the greatest popu- larity among the book buyers has been en- joyed by Winston Churchill. This despite that he has not written since l9l 7. Harold Bell Wright holds second place, with Booth Tarkington pressing him closely. Such writ- ers as Galsworthy and Conrad rank well down in the list, Conrad being placed sev- enty-seventh. The most popular single novel in these twenty-live years has been Sinclair Lewis' Main Street. If Winter Comes ranks next. Of the one hundred and one novel- ists listed, sixty-five are men and thirty-six women-which is a very splendid showing for the women, considering the great prepon- derance of men writers. Of the total num- ber, sixty-nine are of American birth. In the May number of the Forum, Arthur Symons, called by that magazine dean of critics and stylists, takes his turn at picking the fifteen greatest novels. It is surpris- ing to note that there are only three British books in the list. But it is infinitely more sur- prising to note the three that are picked. They are Fielding's Tom Jones, Richard- son's Clarissa Harlowef' and Swift's Gul- liver's Travels. Wliich, I believe, is quite contrary to the common judgment of those who study English literature. Hawthorne, with his Scarlet Letter, is the only American to win a place. After holding the Intercollegiate Debating Championship for nine years, during which time it was never once beaten, little Bates recently dropped a two-to-one decision and the championship to another small college, Colgate. During this career of victory Bates had yearly triumphs over Yale, Harvard, Cornell, and many other great eastern and middle western universities. Three times it defeated Oxford, and once it positively over- whelmed Cambridge. This, with the football record of Centre, is an object lesson to all other small col- leges. It demonstrates what the little fellow can do, if he goes about it seriously and zest- fully. It is far from an impossibility that St. John's might build up such debating tra- ditions and records as are Bates'. It would require just these things-someone with a vision and the courage of his vision, and zeal on the part of the men of the college. On the Hfth day of last month the old Italian university of Pavia celebrated the eleventh centenary of its recognition by Loth- aire, grandson of Charlemagne, as the fore- most scholastic institution of that day. It is not certain how many years this seat of learning had existed before it was accorded this signal honor. Almost since Rome, this venerable, thriv- ing old institution has looked upon the chang- ing immensities of history-one wonders what it thinks about as it looks at the world today. Does it smile its slow smile of amused toler- ance? or is it fearful? or hopeful? or what? Frank johnson Goodnow, president of Johns Hopkins University, is the sponsor of lwo new departures that may in time work a revolution in American higher educational methods. These are so related that the one will lead almost inevitably into the other.

Suggestions in the St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) collection:

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 41

1925, pg 41

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 19

1925, pg 19

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 90

1925, pg 90

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 71

1925, pg 71

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 84

1925, pg 84

St Johns College - Ozanam Yearbook (Toledo, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 77

1925, pg 77


Searching for more yearbooks in Ohio?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Ohio yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.