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Page 26 text:
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loyal, brave and great-hearted man will ever be cherished in the hearts of the friends and alumni of our institution. Dr. Menges was in many respects a striking character. He was possessed of an indomitable will a.nd perseverance, and to those pur- poses which he considered worthy of his time and attention he en- tered into the accomplishment of the-m with such intensity and deter- minati-on that seemingly insurmountable difficulties were overcome. Like all broad-minded, aggressive men, he entertained decided views upon most subjects and did not hesitate to express his opinions, nor to combat those of others, which he thought were unwarranted. As a natural result of this antagonism he was looked upon with disfavor by some, his motives misconstrued by o-thers, and in many respects he was entirely misunderstood by those not intimately acquainted with him. He was broad-minded and liberal in his views, and, while aggressive, keen-witted and a strong antagonist, he would not take a mean advantage even of an enemy. He was kind-hearted and ever ready to listen to a sto-ry of distress, and render help, if he consid- ered the subject at worthy one. Many of the students can recall oc- casions where his material help and wise co-unsel, always given un- grudgingly, has lessened their weary load and encouraged them on to greater efforts and the final accomplishment of their purpose. He believed that life meant activity and progression, and as a consequence could not tolerate stagnation in anything, nor inactivity in tho-se aro-und him. Could those of his friends who knew him best have been present on tha.t bea.utiful june- morning, when the con- suming, fervent heat resolved back to its primal elements all that remainedof his material form, they would have realized, that in carry- ing out his last request, how well his life's motives were fulfilled, for the chemical elements thus freed were given back to the Great Store- house, there to take up new work in Nature's Laboratory and carry on that which had already been begun. I J. H. PRoTHERo. Z2
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Page 25 text:
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tal Surgery. In four years, through his untiring efforts, its attend'-A ance was increased from 40 to 425 students, while in equipment it was second to none in the land. He received the degree of D. D. S. from this school in 1893, and afteiwvards filled various chairs with credit and honor. ' In 1896 Northwestern University Dental School and the Amer- ican College of Dental Surgery were consolidated, the combined' schools retaining the former name and w-orking under the auspices of the Northwestern University. Dr. Menges was retained as secre- tary and business manager of the new school, and to a great extent' the entire management of the business affairs was left to his judg- ment. His ambition was to make the school one of the best, if not the very best, institutions of dental learning in the world, and neither time nor expense was spared by him, up to the time of his death, tof- accomplish his object. , ' The last work upon which he was 'engaged the day preceding, his final illness was the revision of a paper on 'fHigher Dental Edu-- cationf' in which he advocated a higher standardof admission and an increase in the months of attendance. His enthusiasm and inten- sity of purpose along these lines was not merely theoretical. He was- formnlating plans and making arrangements whereby, in a very short time, the ideas he advocated could have been realized. His sudden death cast a cloud of gl-oom not only on our own department, but over the entire University as well, among the officers of which he' liad, for some time, been recognized as a man whose opinions on important and weighty matters were worthy of consideration. Con- sidering the fact that the entire management had been to a large ex- tent in Dr. Menges, hands, after his death the friends and students- of the school were doubtful as to its continued prosperity. Those doubts have, however, been dispelled, for Dr. Menges- Ubuilded better than he knew, and had laid a broader and a firmer foundation than the friends of the institutions realized, The University proper has assumed full charge, and under its careful and judicious management the school work is being earnestly and successfully carried on at the present time, while its future outlook' is very encouraging. The time and effort spent by Dr. Menges is, without doubt, largely responsible for this, and the memory of this 21
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