: 8 THE 8 >~ ~: '~! ta PETIT JEAN ~~! ~ ~( ...... 192.7 " THE H CLUB J. O. M URPHY CL INT SURIJI;H. RAYMOND HAZLET, TATUM MILLS MURRELL TOIJD E UGE NE HIGlIl'OWER. L. O. SANDERSON LEO ACI(ERS At the dOse of the school term of 19:2·3-26 the II Clu b \\'as organ ized [lecause of the l, eeu liar r equi rcmcnb for memcer,hip in the II Club, it might properly be sty led I he "honor" cluu for men of Ha r din g College. To be a member of the H Club, a man must be a "Harding letter man" Jr must have represented n ard ing Coll ege in some activity in which letter s H e not awarded, in fOI'ensie work or in :'Ome other department of the School of Fine Arts . He must b~ in full sympathy \\'ith the ideal s for wh ich Harding College s tand". which idea ls characterize the in stitution and di stingui sh it from the ord inary slate sc hool. Thu s the organization of »uc h a club wa s ef fected to promote interest and g rowth in th e varied acli"ili es of school life and to encourage hahits of clean living which are esse ntial to the developme nt of man's triune natu re, physica ll ,v, mentally, and morally. It is the purpose of the II Club to hecome a potent factor in the de- \"C lopment of the affairs of our school. \l'hile th e club is yet in its infan cy and the membership relatively small. it has "lI'eady in the first year of its ex istence accomplished much that is of real worth to t he SC1001. P erhaps t he greatest work of the club thus rar has been t he sponsor in \( of the organizati on of "The Alumni and Ex-Student Association of Ha rdin !!; College." Th e s tep \\'ill, no doubt, be felt for time to come in the development of Harding College and in making it a pe rmanent institution. Page eighty-jour :
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