. Sargasso . has not succeeded? For patriotic devotion behold the club the Roman Senate if seated in the Girls Parlor every other Tuesdaynight have maintained a per cent attendance with the Students Parlor justacross the hall? Can it be said that any generation of Athenian youth received more en-lightened information in the Grove of Academe than has come from the pro-grams of present day classicists ? The ancients had Demosthenes and Aristole;Classical Club, William Dudley Foulke and Doctor Dean. Then did not the club rejoice in an Earlham camp supper and partake of aFeas


. Sargasso . has not succeeded? For patriotic devotion behold the club the Roman Senate if seated in the Girls Parlor every other Tuesdaynight have maintained a per cent attendance with the Students Parlor justacross the hall? Can it be said that any generation of Athenian youth received more en-lightened information in the Grove of Academe than has come from the pro-grams of present day classicists ? The ancients had Demosthenes and Aristole;Classical Club, William Dudley Foulke and Doctor Dean. Then did not the club rejoice in an Earlham camp supper and partake of aFeast of the Gods? Who will say that feasting was not a most pleasant diver-sion of the ancients? Perhaps the spell of past ages has a lure only for thisorganization of twenty-five. To them, however, the few hours of classical occu-pation are as a pleasant transport to the lotus fields of fair Lethe beyond ChaeronsFerry. One hundred eight The EarlhamService Club President—G. R. Brown Secretary—R. W. Nicholson. The Great War is ended, and the vast hosts of citizen-soldiery are again clad in their civilian garments. But be-neath this somber exterior, in every heart there beats a strong-er pulse of patriotism that binds them inseparably into a living,striving, and serving group of citizens—men who have offeredtheir all in the service of their nation. Out of the two hundred men enrolled at Earlham, aboutseventy-five have been in the military service of the UnitedStates—some in the army, some in the navy, and some in avia-tion. They felt the need of a club to foster the old armyspirit of comradeship and to show their place in the worldwar. The Earlham Service Club was organized, holding eligi-ble for membership all persons who had served with anybranch of the military forces of the United States. The pur-pose of the club is to perpetuate the idea of service—to thenation and to their fellow men—for, to the ex-soldiers of thecountry has fallen the greatest of opportunities—t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle