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Page 15 text:
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been since that time a centre for alumni pilgrimages and for the enter- tainment of college guests--a place of rare hospitality. Two chil- dren were born into this home, Mary Louisa, now an instructor in the college, and Edward Lawrence, now an undergraduate student. Few mathematicians have had more of poetry in their souls than he. From his great teacher at Dartmouth, Arthur S. Hardy, mathe- matician, novelist, poet, he learned that a scientist, even in what many deem the dryest of the sciences, need not have the native poetry with- in him denied and starved. Always as an avocation he kept abreast of the literature of the time, always he read and reread the older classics, and often he wrote for his club papers that surprised even those who knew him well by their trenchant criticism and their reve- lations of mastery of a field seemingly apart from his profession. He was a poet, though never a poet for publication. Only a few weeks before his death he penned this telling lyric, To the Pacific Oceanf, his valedictory, a lyric that reveals better than any words that I might pen the soul of the man, a soul sweeping in thought the mightiest of the oceans and dreaming of the vastness of a peace that touches on every side the infinite: Thou teeming child, of heaven, to whose peaceful bosom The swelling commerce of a world now turns, that stirs our souls To seek thy own great quiet and unfathomed rest, Bring back the Peace! full Hood, to the distracted life of men New horn, and o'er it, crowned with smiles, sing soft again The Angels' Song of Bethlehem. llll
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Page 14 text:
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...Y.-..- . an ' 'f v . 1 , A 7. ti- fl- Q., 1 1 1 no the college and it saw the beginnings of real appropriations by the State Legislature. In the thirty years that followed, a great univer- sity was shaped out of a small country college. It was a period that required creative builders, men of vision, men of steadiness and cau- tion in moments of perplexity, men willing to sacrifice themselves for the college and the Commonwealth. lt was a glorious opportunity such as comes to few men, and Professor Willard threw himself into it with all his sturdy New England soul, to it he gave all the great endowment of his inheritance and of his training. And the college forever will be the richer because he clave to it in the days that were dark and helped to guide it with his strong ideals. He was broader than his class-room and broader than the halls of administration. He gave of himself richly for the religious life of the college and the community. It had been during his undergraduate days that the Y. M. C. A. movement had begun its strong course as a power in the colleges. He had attended the earliest conventions and had felt to the full the spell of Moody and Henry Drummond, that spell that so mightily laid hold of John R. Mott, and Robert E. Spear, and Sherwood Eddy, and sent them into the work that has so shaken the student world for a generation. He brought the vision and the compelling power of this experience to Penn State, and for thirty years he was undoubtedly the leading worker and counsellor of the Y. M. C. A. at the college. He was a strong worker, too, in the church of his denomination in the village. As a citizen, standing always for the betterment of civic conditions in the borough, as a charter member of the Phi Kappa Phi honor society whose secretary he was up to last ,luneg and as a jovial member of the college literary club to which he contributed many rich hours--in many divers fields he will be long remembered. His home life was an ideal one. He was married in 1897 to Miss Henrietta Norris Nunn, of Baltimore, and his home on the campus has l10l
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Page 16 text:
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Zin Jifflemnriam Henry Freeman Stecker EDieu 9Dctuher so 1923 c-A True Sczentist and cyln I spmng 'Teacher n n . .
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