National Junior Classical League | |
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NJCL official emblem[1] |
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Abbreviation | National JCL, NJCL[2] |
Formation | 1936[2] |
Legal status | Educational, service, non-profit |
Purpose/focus | Classical studies |
Headquarters | 422 Wells Mill Drive Miami University Oxford, Ohio 45056 United States |
Coordinates | |
Region served | Worldwide |
Membership | 45,771[3] |
President 1st Vice-President 2nd Vice-President Communications Coord. Parliamentarian Historian Editor Committee Chair |
Daniel Kim Erika Russ Akhila Ananthram Safeeyah Quereshi Sam Buck Emily Chang Kurt Ristroph Ms. Amy Elifrits |
Parent organization | American Classical League |
Affiliations | National Senior Classical League |
Website | NJCL.org |
The National Junior Classical League (National JCL or NJCL) is a youth organization of secondary school students sponsored by the American Classical League (ACL).[2][4] Founded in 1936,[4] the NJCL comprises more than 1,000 Latin, Greek and Classical chapters in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom,[4][5] and with over 45,000 members,[3] is the largest Classical organization in the world today.[4] Its mission: "to encourage an interest in and an appreciation of the language, literature and culture of ancient Greece and Rome and to impart an understanding of the debt of our own culture to that of classical antiquity."[1] The current NJCL Committee Chair is Ms. Amy Elifrits of West Chester, Ohio, a teacher of Latin at Lakota East High School (Liberty Township, Ohio).[6]
NJCL official colors are Roman purple and gold. [1]
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NJCL Song (The Purple and Gold)[7]
Written by Dave Clements, Max Spires and Mrs. R.G. Frazier
Revised by Mrs. B.H. Norveson
Seeking the best, the highest our goal
Working for greatness through glories of old.
Searching the realms of the golden past,
We follow the Classics' truths that last
In knowledge, truth, and fellowship, we're growing everyday [sic]
The friendly hand of J.C.L. aids in every way.
In Rome's proud steps we're marching on,
With every true colleague,
And forever we'll hold to the Purple and Gold,
Of the Junior Classical League.
NJCL Creed[2][8]
Written by Dorothy Park Latta
We the members of the Junior Classical League, covenant to hand on the torch of classical civilization in the modern world.
We believe an acquaintance with the civilizations of Greece and Rome will help us understand and appraise this world of today,
Which is indebted to the ancient civilization in its government and laws, literature, language and arts.
We affirm the JCL experience develops responsibility, fosters brotherhood, promotes enthusiasm, encourages competition, inspires dedication and enriches our total growth.
The NJCL hosts a week long national convention annually at a college campus in late July or early August, where 1200-1500 students compete in academic tests and creative arts competitions.[4][5][9]
Other components of the convention in which students may participate include Certamen, seminars commonly known as Colloquia, and Ludi (literally "games"—various athletic and recreational events). A theme for the following year's convention is chosen by the incoming president each year.[9]
Most state-level NJCL chapters hold their own annual conventions at locations central to their attendees, where schools compete in varied events. These events are divided into academic levels for scoring purposes; participation can be countywide, regional, or even statewide. Awards are given out to schools based on sweepstakes points, earned by placing high in competitive events.[5][10]
A popular event is the talent show, known as That's Entertainment!, always held on the night before the final farewell dance. It consists of skits put on by the NSCL between the individual acts, and since around 1985, a final surprise performance from a group of three mysterious men in suits and sunglasses, called the Racketeers (for the matching red tennis racket bags they wear on their heads), who walk on stage, perform a silent dance routine, and walk off.
The National Convention has been held at many sites since 1954, usually in late July or early August.[11][12]
Year | Number | College/University | Theme |
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2014[11] | LXI (61st Annual) |
Emory University Atlanta, Georgia |
TBD |
2013[11] | LX (60th Annual) |
University of Nevada, Las Vegas Las Vegas, Nevada |
TBD |
2012[11] | LIX (59th Annual) |
Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, North Carolina |
"Dimidium facti qui coepit habet" (He who has begun has half the deed done.) Horace, Epistulae I.40 |
2011[13] | LVIII (58th Annual) |
Eastern Kentucky University Richmond, Kentucky |
"Bene legere saecla vincere." ("To read well is to conquer the ages.") -Isaac Flagg, 19th Century Classicist |
2010[14] | LVII (57th Annual) |
North Dakota State University Fargo, North Dakota |
"Non est ad astra mollis e terris via." ("There is no easy way from the earth to the stars.") -Seneca |
2009[15] | LVI (56th Annual) |
University of California, Davis Davis, California |
"Fortuna nobis vi animi tantum frenabitur." ("The level of our success will be limited only by our imagination.") -Aesop |
2008[16] | LV (55th Annual) |
Miami University Oxford, Ohio |
"Non nobis solum nati sumus." ("We are not born for ourselves alone.") -Cicero, De Officiis |
2007[17] | LIV (54th Annual) |
University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee |
"Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero." ("Seize the day, trusting as little as possible in tomorrow.") -Horace, Ode I-XI |
2006[18] | LIII (53rd Annual) |
Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana |
"Amicitiae nostrae memoriam spero sempiternam fore." ("I hope that the memory of our friendship will be everlasting.") -Cicero |
2005[19] | LII (52nd Annual) |
University of Missouri Columbia, Missouri |
"Nil sine magno labore." ("Nothing without great labor.") -Unattributed |
2004[20] | LI (51st Annual) |
University of Richmond Richmond, Virginia |
"Facta non verba." ("Deeds not words.") -Unattributed |
2003[21] | L (50th Annual) |
Trinity University San Antonio, Texas |
"Natura inest in mentibus nostris insatiabilis quaedam cupiditas veri videndi." ("Nature has planted in our minds an insatiable longing to see the truth.") -Cicero |
2002[22] | XLIX (49th Annual) |
University of Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky |
"Magnos homines virtute metimur, non fortuna." ("We measure great men by their virtue, not their fortune.") -Cornelius Nepos, Eumenes I |
2001[23] | XLVIII (48th Annual) |
Tulane University New Orleans, Louisiana |
"Vultus ac frons animi ianua." ("The face and its expression are the door of the soul.") -Quintus Cicero, Commentariolum Petitionis Consulatus XI.44 |
2000[24] | XLVII (47th Annual) |
University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma |
"Faber est suae quisque fortunae." ("Each one is the architect of his own fate.") -Appius Claudius Caecus |
1999[25] | XLVI (46th Annual) |
Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida |
"Audentior ito qua tua te fortuna sinet." ("Continue to go more boldly where your fortune will allow you.") -Virgil |
1998[26] | XLV (45th Annual) |
University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst, Massachusetts |
"Patria est communis omnium parens" ("Our native land is the common parent of us all.") -Cicero |
1997 | XLIV (44th Annual) |
North Dakota State University Fargo, North Dakota |
"Aspirat primo fortuna labori." ("Fortune smiles upon our first effort.") -Virgil |
1996 | XLIII (43rd Annual) |
Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana |
"Nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus." ("Virtue is the true and only nobility.") -Unattributed |
1995 | XLII (42nd Annual) |
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas |
"Aut viam inveniam aut faciam." ("Either I shall find a way or I shall make one.") -Hannibal |
1994 | XLI (41st Annual) |
University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee |
"Occasionem oblatam tenete." ("Seize an opportunity when it presents itself.") -Cicero, Philippicae |
1993 | XL (40th Annual) |
Miami University Oxford, Ohio |
"Nullius boni sine socio iucunda possessio est." ("No good thing is pleasing without friends to share it.") -Seneca, Epistulae morales ad Lucilium |
1992 | XXXIX (39th Annual) |
San Diego State University San Diego, California |
"Mens sana in corpore sano" ("A sound mind in a sound body") -Juvenal, Satire X |
1991 | XXXVIII (38th Annual) |
Emory University Atlanta, Georgia |
"Cura mihi futuri." ("My concern is for the future.") -Ovid, Metamorphoses XIII.363 |
1990 | XXXVII (37th Annual) |
University of North Texas Denton, Texas |
"Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit." ("Perhaps one day it will be pleasing to remember these things.") -Virgil, Aeneid I.203 |
1989 | XXXVI (36th Annual) |
Indiana University of Pennsylvania Indiana, Pennsylvania |
"Unity in Diversity" |
1988 | XXXV (35th Annual) |
University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado |
"Amicitia" (Cicero's "in friendship we find nothing false or insincere; everything is straightforward and springs from the heart") |
1987 | XXXIV (34th Annual) |
Stetson University DeLand, Florida |
"Nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus." ("Virtue is the one and only true nobility.") -Juvenal |
1986 | XXXIII (33rd Annual) |
Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana |
"Aurea prima sata est aetas, quae sponte sua, fidem rectumque colebat." ("In the beginning was the Golden Age, when men of their own accord maintained good faith and did what was right.") -Ovid, Metamorphoses |
1985 | XXXII (32nd Annual) |
University of New Hampshire Durham, New Hampshire |
"Omnis ars naturae imitatio est." ("All art is an imitation of nature.") -Seneca, Epistulae morales |
1984 | XXXI (31st Annual) |
University of Richmond Richmond, Virginia |
"Caelum certe patet, ibimus illi." ("Surely the sky lies open, we will go that way.") -Ovid, Metamorphoses |
1983 | XXX (30th Annual) |
University of Rochester Rochester, New York |
"Qui mare tenet, eum necesse est rerum potiri." ("He who commands the sea has a command of everything.") -Cicero, Ad Atticum |
1982 | XXIX (29th Annual) |
University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma |
"Auro quaeque ianua panditur." ("A golden key opens any gate.") |
1981 | XXVIII (28th Annual) |
Miami University Oxford, Ohio |
"Mihi curae futura." ("My care is for the future.") -Ovid, Metamorphoses |
1980 | XXVII (27th Annual) |
University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee |
"Nullum saeculum magnis ingeniis clausum est." ("To great talents no era is closed.") -Seneca, Epistulae morales |
1979 | XXVI (26th Annual) |
Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan |
"Bene cogitata si excidunt non occidunt." ("Good thoughts, even if they are forgotten, do not perish.") -Publilius Syrus |
1978 | XXV (25th Annual) |
North Texas State University (now University of North Texas) Denton, Texas |
"Mens invicta manet." ("The mind remains unconquered.") |
1977 | XXIV (24th Annual) |
Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida |
"As runners we pass on the torch of life." |
1976 | XXIII (23rd Annual) |
University of Rochester Rochester, New York |
"Not to know what happened before you were born is to be forever a child." |
1975 | XXII (22nd Annual) |
Ball State University Muncie, Indiana |
"Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit." ("Perhaps one day it will be pleasing to remember these things.") -Virgil, Aeneid |
1974 | XXI (21st Annual) |
University of New Hampshire Durham, New Hampshire |
"Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter" ("Boldly, faithfully, happily") |
1973 | XX (20th Annual) |
Claremont Colleges Claremont, California |
"Unity in diversity" |
1972 | XIX (19th Annual) |
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Blacksburg, Virginia |
"Pax in terra" ("Peace on Earth") |
1971 | XVIII (18th Annual) |
University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma |
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1970 | XVII (17th Annual) |
Ohio University Athens, Ohio |
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1969 | XVI (16th Annual) |
Tulane University & Loyola University New Orleans, Louisiana |
"Una stella fata nostra coniungit." ("One star connects our fates.") |
1968 | XV (15th Annual) |
Michigan State University East Lansing, Michigan |
"Otium cum dignitate" ("Leisure with dignity") -Cicero |
1967 | XIV (14th Annual) |
University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona |
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1966 | XIII (13th Annual) |
Western Kentucky State College (now Western Kentucky University) Bowling Green, Kentucky |
"Why JCL?" |
1965 | XII (12th Annual) |
University of Southern California Los Angeles, California |
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1964 | XI (11th Annual) |
University of Illinois Ubana–Champaign, Illinois |
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1963 | X (10th Annual) |
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas |
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1962 | IX (9th Annual) |
Montana State College (now Montana State University – Bozeman) Bozeman, Montana |
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1961 | VIII (8th Annual) |
Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana |
"Facta non verba" ("Deeds not words") |
1960 | VII (7th Annual) |
University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico |
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1959 | VI (6th Annual) |
St. Olaf College Northfield, Minnesota |
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1958 | V (5th Annual) |
University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan |
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1957 | IV (4th Annual) |
Colorado College Colorado Springs, Colorado |
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1956 | III (3rd Annual) |
Miami University Oxford, Ohio |
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1955 | II (2nd Annual) |
Iowa State Teachers College (now University of Northern Iowa) Cedar Falls, Iowa |
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1954 | I (1st Annual) |
Incarnate Word High School San Antonio, Texas |
Certamen is a quiz bowl game with questions about Roman history, life, and literature, and Latin vocabulary, grammar, derivatives, and use in English.[5][9]
There are sixteen written tests that JClers may compete in at National Convention.[9]
JCL delegates can submit artwork in various categories for contest judging.[9]
Creative Arts at National Convention include Sight Latin Reading, Costume Contest, Latin and English Oratory, and Dramatic Interpretation.[9]
Olympika are athletic events at National Convention. There are Olympika in swimming, track & field, and marathon.[9]
Ludi are events for which sweepstakes points are not awarded. There are Ludi in chess, soccer, ultimate frisbee, volleyball, and formerly basketball, which was replaced by kickball starting with the 2009 convention.[9]
At each National Convention, JCL delegates elect student officers. Each state may only field one candidate each year, and never for a position whose incumbent is from the same state. The offices are President, 1st Vice President, 2nd Vice President, Communications Coordinator, Parliamentarian, Historian, and Editor. Voting is typically conducted by school in each state, with delegates casting two votes (for or abstention), with the exception of a delegation of only one JCLer, in which case only one vote is allowed. Listed below are the current NJCL Officers (2010–11).[6]
Office | Officer | Hometown |
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President | Daniel Kim | Exeter, New Hampshire |
1st Vice-President | Erika Russ | Lexington, Kentucky |
2nd Vice-President | Akhila Ananthram | Clifton, Virginia |
Communications Coordinator | Safeeyah Quereshi | Brookfield, Wisconsin |
Parliamentarian | Sam Buck | Westlake, Ohio |
Historian | Emily Chang | Boston, Massachusetts |
Editor | Kurt Ristroph | Baton Rouge, Louisiana |
As of 2010, forty-seven U.S. states, the District of Columbia, three Canadian provinces, and the United Kingdom each maintain a state (or state-level) chapter of the NJCL; the current total number is 51 as Washington state and British Columbia share a chapter.[3] Many chapters hold their own annual State Convention in addition to the National Convention.[5][10]
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Torch: U.S. is the NJCL's official publication, which details the events of the organization, reports scores, and issues stories. Published four times a year, the only issue sent to all convention attendees (including non-subscribers) is the fall issue, shortly after convention.
Until October 2007, the NJCL also published JCL Highlights in months when the Torch: U.S. was not published. JCL Highlights publicized administrative details about the League, including details about applying for JCL scholarships, information about the upcoming Convention, and requests for information from NJCL officers and national committee members. According to the Fall 2007 Torch: U.S., the National Committee decided at the October 2007 Fall Planning Meeting to eliminate the JCL Highlights in favor of online distribution of the same information.