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Page 10 text:
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Clastf of 1926: YOU are leaving the University in which you have spent four years in preparation for your life calling. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, a very wise old judge, has remarked that ‘‘a university is a place from which men start for the Eternal City.” He has also said that “every calling is great when greatly pursued.” During the years spent in the university you have gained some knowledge of the law, but not sufficient to he a life-long equipment. Because you are leaving this law school you are not to assume that you have learned all the law. The longer one lives the more he finds to learn, and a life well spent will include a large amount of study. Two things you will need in order to he even a moderate success in your calling. The one is industry, the other, honesty. Industry is important. A lazy man is rarely a success, however brilliant he may be, while a man who is industrious may achieve fair success even though not so well gifted as his more brilliant hut less industrious rival. The most important part, however, of your equipment will be honesty which includes honesty in thought, in word and act. Honesty in thought is essential to honesty in word or act, for as one thinks, so he generally speaks and acts. To industry and honesty you should daily add a cheerful and a pleasant smile for those whom you meet. Do not consider that your calling is small or mean or merely a means of making money. Do not try to charge your clients all their business will bear. Ask for your service only what your service is honestly worth. Keep ever in mind that the Law is a great profession to he greatly pursued and that greatness excludes petty or “shyster” method ; of practice. Remember that you will have entrusted to you to he kept spotless the traditions of nearly a thousand years of the legal profession, and that it is in your power for your day at least to mar or keep them uninjured if not increased in glory. Francis Chapman. 6
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Page 9 text:
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TO OI K ESTEEMED FRIEND, TEACHER AND DEAN, THE TWENTY-SIXTH ANNEAL C.RADCATINCi CLASS of temple Umbersitp . Hato rf)ool respectfully and with a deep sense of gratitude, dedicates this Docket'' -the first literary endeavor of its kind in the history of the Law School
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