. Sargasso. ost sight of. It is the fact of the inevitable, if indeed at times unconscious,operation of the law of selection. The men and women who are primarilyinterested in student life naturally gravitate toward the small college. The grad-uate university is the place for the higher reaches of scholarship. It is the placefor the highly trained specialist, for the devotee of research work. The university would expand the bounds of knowledge. The college wouldexpand the minds and hearts of youth. The one is the place for investigation,the other the place for teaching. The university man, on t


. Sargasso. ost sight of. It is the fact of the inevitable, if indeed at times unconscious,operation of the law of selection. The men and women who are primarilyinterested in student life naturally gravitate toward the small college. The grad-uate university is the place for the higher reaches of scholarship. It is the placefor the highly trained specialist, for the devotee of research work. The university would expand the bounds of knowledge. The college wouldexpand the minds and hearts of youth. The one is the place for investigation,the other the place for teaching. The university man, on the side, to be sure,may teach as a means to an end, but he teaches mathematics or history ; thecollege man teaches Freshmen and Sophomores. The college man is the shepherdwho knows his sheep by name and be counts it his highest joy to be known ofthem. He may be a scholar with insight and power, hut if so, the thing thatholds him in the college is that he is a lover, with heart and soul. Robert Lincoln Page forty-nine j^^C^ ?WB^HjTi^^^! * Vi ^Vff 3§^::-^:i $F ^3 bSL * 2T rfl 8r P^ Ifc^tffrrPc *. 1^ ^^ jM§5» • vS W0^ A -^ - ^Hf ?-*! wkT^nff fc ^A ^1 *£. ^ ^Hta-~ 4B _^, RL «_ ? K^* ^k ^ sT^^ J^ OH a U wWH e Qjimtg (Biratttt0 Christian Presiden t—Florence Long ARLHAM Alumni, week-end visitors, and especially the men and womenfor whom our college halls are a present and vital reality, all unite indeclaring that they feel a charm about the place: an indefinable spiritpresence which breathes upon them a sense of contentment and secret one has ever located this charm, but it is generally conceded that the ChristianAssociations are an essential factor in it. The spirit which lives in them is as oldas the College itself and bids fair to outlive it and its children. The EarlhamHall Association feels that the past year has drawn it one step nearer to theideal set before it. Its membership, registered at one hundred and fourteen,includes almost every girl


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle