Puppies help Otterbein students relieve stress
In order to reduce the stress of finals, puppies will be available to play with.
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In order to reduce the stress of finals, puppies will be available to play with.
While classical operas, concert bands, choirs and musical theater performances attract most of the attention on campus, some forms of student-produced pop and rock music are developing a presence.
When it comes to weekend shenanigans, the campus is somewhat limited as to where students can go to have a beer, dance and meet non-Otterbein folk. Unless it’s at Jimmy V’s, Old Bag of Nails or an off-campus house, our nightlife activities throughout the year begin to feel like routine.
“Yeah, I am black. You need to illuminate me,” Roy Wood Jr. shouted after the dim lighting was brightened in the Pit Theatre.
Three boys prance down the steps in their mom’s bathing suits, one in a neon top wrapped around his body, another wearing a one piece with a frilly skirt and one more clad in an old fashion one piece to show. They await their dad, who walks in the front door defeated from his day at work. As the mother watches proudly, the father bursts into confusion and anger. The son adorned in the pink tutu was comedian Brian Moote.
The T&C takes a look at how students, both in relationships and not, spend their Valentine’s Day.
A blast to the past throwback, a 40s and 50s era romantic dance, is open to the Otterbein community on Feb. 16. The annually held Music and Romance will vary in theme and venue from the year before.
On the first day of school, freshman athletic training major Robbie Guiliano rode his green Razor scooter named Chives to class. He scooted all the way up to his desk from his dorm and with his teacher in a fit of laughter, he sat down as if this were a social norm.
Football Tim Doup’s upgrade from offensive coordinator to head coach is only one of the changes for a Cardinal football team that struggled last season.
Six tournament wins, their third OAC Championship in four years and a trio of seasoned seniors are all leading up to the chance to compete for a national title for the men’s golf team.
As the track and field season winds down, the Cardinals prepare for the Ohio Athletic Conference Championship at Wilmington, reflect on their season and set goals for the remaining part of the year.
The amount of smartphone applications these days can be overwhelming. According to Apple Inc., there are more than 500,000 for the iPhone and 424,000 for the Android.
With 20 wins and nine losses, the women’s softball team season has been an exciting one.
Hours in hair and makeup, elaborate outfits and carefully choreographed dance numbers are all components of Otterbein’s biannual drag show.
The same old routine for getting in soccer shape tends to get boring when you do these routines for almost your whole life. I decided to take some classes that Otterbein offered in the Rike Center to get a workout in a different way.
We have taken social media too far.
With Dick Reynolds’ retirement, the door is now open for a new athletic director and head men’s basketball coach at Otterbein.
The sacrifices and commitment that are required to play two college sports can crumble even the most dedicated athlete. But after enduring the year-round training, three knee surgeries and the months of rehab that followed, Kristen Bennett can still be found circling Otterbein’s track and playing on the volleyball court.
Senior Austin Curbow ran the 60-meter hurdles and had an outstanding performance at the Feb. 11 meet.
On Feb. 11, a frigid Saturday, the Otterbein Cardinals hosted the All-Ohio Division III track meet at the Rike Center. The men’s team scored 35 points and placed eighth in the 18-team meet while the women continued their hot streak and scored 57.5 and placed fourth in the 19-team meet.