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Page 18 text:
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Ale. Judge xander Martin Dean of the LdU ' Department DIED. DECEMBER 16, 1902 ' 35e fiocc cucr tn f(Je fiocG of fl5c Bfu; bcnf ' fi tBl3o Ijaoe Bot oi 6iB fecf. ' X the name of this University which Judge Alex- ander ]Martin served so long and faithfully, I am commissioned to speak of him to you. Cllis life, for the past thirteen years, is part of the University ' s history; his work its nolile heritage. There is not need for eulogy in this presence. You know him. C. He was honest. He hated sham. He was hrave. There was none of the paltroon in his make up. He was trustworthy. The Scriptures tell of a rare man who sweareth to his own hurt and changeth not. Of such was he. He stood on tliis cami us for right- eousness. He reverenced law. CJudge ]Martin wore not his heart upon his sleeve for daws to peck at l)ut tliose who knew him best will speak him gentle, full of tenderness. He held aloft the stand- ard of the great profession of the law. It was to him no pettifogging busi- ness, thing of trick and low chicanery, but profession high and noble. He preached and practiced that fine the- ory of the law hich holds hmiianity as the lawyer ' s client, the sense of do- ing the nearest duty nobly as the fee most to be desired. CHe was learned in the law in tlie best and finest sense. Student, au- thor, advocate, jurist, teacher, he adorned the bar of Missouri and with us moin n to-day the lawyers and other citizens of the state who held him in high esteem and admiration. CI, Recognizing his worth, his sturdy intellect, his long and useful service, the University does honor to the dead. How ])itiful if tliis were all — if Judge lartin lived not in the lives of the students who have sat at his feet, who have been taught of ecjuity l)y the jin-ist who has himself come to the court of last resort. C Death ends not all for him nor any one of us. The belief in immortality is beginningless. That man will live again is the scarlet thread in all the somber woof of dreary years, prophecy of new life and ])r()mise. Of ccmrse science may not prove it. handmaiden of truth tiiough science be. Certaiidy history has no evidence for there is no liistory of the immortals. Here philosophy fails. But the heart knows best and tlic hiart says man is immortal. The question which the Jewish ])oet-])hilosopher asked four thousand years ago has been answered affirmatively by every human lieart since the mother of all living moniiud !ur first cliild dead. — Waller WUVuims,
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Page 17 text:
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F ci (• !i I f V of the U u i v c r .r i t v — C o ii t i )i u c d ROLLA ROY RAMSEY, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Instructor in Physics. RICHARD B. MOORE, B. S.. Instructor in Chemistry. JONAS VILES, A. M., Ph. D. Instructor in Jlistory. GEORGE M. TUCKER. B. S.. Ph. D. Instructor in Agriculture. HERMAN SCHLUNDT, B. S., Ph. D. Instructor in Chemistry. WILLIAM L. WESTERMANN. A. B., Ph. D. Instructor in Greek. CHARLES W. HODSDON, B. S. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. ARTHUR B. COBLE. A. B.. Ph. D., Instructor in Mathematics. CAROLINE T. STEWART, A. M., Ph. D, Instructor in Germanic Languages. MARY IDA MANN, Instructor in Physical Training. GRACE S. WILLIAMS, Instructor in Romance Languages. MARY ESTELLE PORTER. B. L., Instructor in Commercial Studies. ARTHUR C. DUNCAN, Instructor in Shop Work. FLOYD W. TUTTLE, A. B., Instructor in Physical Training. N. F. MURRAY, Instructor in Horticulture. LOWELL A. GOODMAN, C. E. Instructor in Horticulture. LOUIS INGOLD, A. B., A. M., Acting Assistant Professor of Mathematics. H. V. S. JONES. A. B., Acting Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature. NORMAN MACLAREN TRENHOLME, A. M.. Ph. D. ' Assistant Professor (in charge; of History.
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