. Bowdoin Orient. JAMES A. NORTON CEDRIC R. CROWELL CHAS. B. HASKELL Humanity must speak to us with poignant voice inthe street or from the stage, and we must be will-ing to give that most precious of all gifts—our-selves. Expressed in harsh money terms, we leave thiscollege indebted to society over a thousand dol-lars for the training given us, and there is theinestimable debt for the privilege of associationwith noble professors who are giving their verylives for the youth of the land. The collegeyears have been given to us as a stewardship, andthe lines have fallen in pleasant places. We ca


. Bowdoin Orient. JAMES A. NORTON CEDRIC R. CROWELL CHAS. B. HASKELL Humanity must speak to us with poignant voice inthe street or from the stage, and we must be will-ing to give that most precious of all gifts—our-selves. Expressed in harsh money terms, we leave thiscollege indebted to society over a thousand dol-lars for the training given us, and there is theinestimable debt for the privilege of associationwith noble professors who are giving their verylives for the youth of the land. The collegeyears have been given to us as a stewardship, andthe lines have fallen in pleasant places. We can-not repay in money, but what is asked of us isthat we help someone else, that is the true tributethat we can lay at the feet of our beloved. It matters little what line of work we world is so big and its needs so extensivethat there is room and to spare for publicist andpainter, lawyer and laborer. The tools of lifeare before us; let us use them, not primarily forourselves, but with a heart filled


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