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Page 6 text:
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Page 5 text:
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UNIVERSITY 2 rx QU AX -sw , fx ff -As -'If Nuff:-1 49 I ER S Pire jacques Marquette 163 7-16 W WM , -Wffififfw ffgwfwfwffwfg Wi! M W Q THE 'I956 HILLTOP if W MARQUETTE uNlvERslTY
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Page 7 text:
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not All .3 . .-. ij. ,N a, , , jk.:-,Q :E p Y' ,I 1, ' gg 'mage ra l , aj 3 Qi t i 5'-wi ll 'ffl f r i-1 , f 1 -r . uf 'Fill fl ' l earn i a A .i ii ii laia irf. - aa ,N K . 1 ,NX pg ...,x 1,yg . A I- lflleairii-e.-at-el - ' i Q a ll . fe et- ef R ' gi ' -S - ' ,w.,Q ,,.A . ,A l 5.5 113 3, iff' I . K, lk f' l il ji Mi tffr , li I If Q: . , i 4 , . 4 It is fitting that this monument should be here, looking out with calm dignity over the lake that the little Iesuit loved so Well. He traveled through the lands of the lake for eight years, giving his strength, his zeal, his life that the word of God might live. Those eight years are history. Pere Marquette was a slight man, but a man with an iron will and a courage that defied all the limitations of his physical stature. His love for God drove him to master six Indian tongues and With this as his tool he went among the natives and taught them of Christ. He lived with them, Worked with them, cared for them. He became more than a pastor. He became their brother and their friend. His superior, Pere Claude Dablon, once Wrote that 'chis gentleness made him all things to all men-a Frenchman with the French, a Huron with the Hurons, an Algonquin with the Algonquinsf' Pere Marquette was first of all a missionary, obsessed with a hunger for souls and possessed of the spirit of Godf, Everything he preached, everything he did, everything he believed in life sprang from this inner fire. His driving zeal carried him like a leaf on the Wind of an inexhaustible energy to the far ends of the New World, where he scattered the Catholic faith in lands which had never before echoed the name of Christ. Why, then, did the name of this intrepid man of God, whose life was spent on the salvation of savage souls, inspire the names of countless villages, towns, cities and counties? Why did the people place his statue in the National Hall of Statuary, his image on a stained glass Window at Harvard university? And above all, Why does one of the largest Catholic universities in the world bear his, a missionary's name? Perhaps at first glance this would seem strange. His was not a life devoted to teaching in the academic sense. His was one of physical struggle and hard- ship, devoted to the primitive life of his people and tormented by the unending effort to endure. His equipment was not books and blackboards and test tubes, it was a missionaryis cross, a chieftainis calumet and hard physical labor. But Pere Marquette was a man of unquenchable ambition, unshakable de- votion. He Was a man dedicated to the lives and Welfare of his fellow men, the Indians he worked and prayed With. He was a man who possessed not only a magnificent love for God, but a drive that would not let him rest until he had spread this love to others. The spirit, the ideals, the aspirations that were Pere Marquette's must pulse through the veins of a university if it is to be great. A N f ? f l lit if N lik rf htfyigyk lia r in A U lixgiiw -Ilan f - -
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