Show NO MAN CAN LIVE TO HIMSELF each one to day generally a part of one great whole men do not choose their parts in life separately and individually in our day as they did in the days of our fathers the men are becoming rare now who have business of their own under taken upon their own individual cap tal and built up and conducted inde upon their own response res professional men are rare who rise to the top of their profession without attaching themselves more or less intimately to institutions or cor lons of some sort doctors to hospitals lawyers to great corporate undertakings men of science to the great enterprises in which science Is applied each man finds himself a small part of some great whole whose operation is decided by votes taken about long tables in directors looms whose morals are composite morals a compromise combination of what the material interests of the body dictate and what the enterprise of its man agers suggests the character of every man who participates being merged in the general compound president woodrow wilson princeton eity |