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Page 12 text:
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The Dean's Message OUR daily life is your temple and your religion. Whenever you enter into it take with you your all. Take the plow and the forge and the mallet and the lute, The things you have fashioned in necessity or for delight. For in revery you cannot rise above your achievements nor fall lower than your failures. And take with you all men: For in adoration you cannot fly higher than their hopes nor humble yourself lower than their despair.”—Gibran.
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Page 11 text:
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Sheldon E. Davis, President HAVE you ever wished that you could say all and everything you wanted to? Have you felt aggrieved because you could not wail, warble, roar or swear according to mood? Well, what is holding you hack? Some there are that feel themselves repressed because . . . because .... 1 wonder whether they know? After all. who is muzzling their expression? Do they actually want to say terrible things? Could they? Would they really In; able to voice anything eloquent, shocking, thrilling, iconoclastic or revolutionary? I wonder. The thing that represses most of us is lack of audience. No one cares to hear, much less to listen in on our grievances, dreams or witticisms, but there are those who can speak and be heard. Enter the 1934 Chinook. It speaks the fancies, freedom and fun of the College year. Its seriousness is tied to reality but it freely speaks the language which you gave it. To its voice we listen now; its reminiscent whispers will come tomorrow. May its message find you free as you have been in giving the Chinook its voice. May you want to say what needs listening to even as this bright book is doing. SHELDON E. DAVIS
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Page 13 text:
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H. H. Swain, Executive Secretary Many classes have gone out from the Normal College well prepared, expecting to deal with problems such as classes before them hud met and mastered. In 1934 you are going out into an uncharted world. No one has explored the passes that are ahead of you. No one knows which trails lead over the divide and which ones wind over a ridge hack into the valleys from which you came, or fade out in impenetrable wastes. You may have to try many trails. Do not lose heart. Remember that you are explorers. Watch well for signs. Keep open minds. Dare to take risks. And may you and those you lead reach the heights where you can glimpse the view beyond the mountains and so come to walk with surer feet toward tomorrow's goal. II. II. SWAIN
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