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Savitar1971p070
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info:fedora/mu:300233
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« ear .- . . -ix. v‘ «. :‘:.::;t::;: 238:: v: t . ~., . ‘° s1»v.. ‘):-V' we ' ’ WV 9 “'* 44 ’ L. " . -Qy‘ jxhzwfit ;..5V - . 4 " *--~.~v has L L;3"“,. . __ ' ' ~=’ tl'?ll..°.'P* s V A handful of student leaders gave birth to the Missouri Student Store. The idea was nursed and the funds raised by an even bigger group of workers and the end result
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civc000084p0071
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info:fedora/mu:367449
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SAMUEL s. inrnrsaann. 71 No questions were asked them, and no explana- tions were given. Flanche merely ordered them to walk off a few steps toward a tree, which they did; he then gave the Word “fire !” and the whole com», pany fired at them, literally tearing them to pieces! , It would ask the enlightened world if there ever was committed a more diabolical deed? If, in all the annals of cruelty, or in the world’s wide history, a murder more cold-blooded and cruel could be found? A citizen who happened to be present ventured to ask in astonishment why this was done ; to which Flanche merely replied, as he rode off, “they bees the friends of Sam I-Iildebrass ! ” It was now Capt. Esroger’s time to commit some deed of atrocity, to place himself on an equality with Capt. Flanche ; so after a moment’s reflection, he concluded that the inurcler of my uncle, John. Roan, would be sufficient to place this brutality be- ‘ yond all question. John Roan was a man about fifty years of age, was proverbial for his honesty, always paid his debts, and kept himself entirely aloof fromteither side during the war, but against his loyalty nothing had’ ever been produced, or even attempted. One of his sons was in the Union army, and an~ other was a Rebel. A l a Being my uncle, and the father of Allen Roan, however, was a sufficient pretext for the display of military brutality“: His house was situated about three miles from
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civk000028p0031
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info:fedora/mu:367439
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victizm the South had yet offered upon the altar of her sacrifices. Ainid the low gxfiowls of J[11{3cSllbSldl11g‘ battle, amid the slain of his heroic brigade, who liad followed him three times to the crest of “Bloody 1;§['ll.l,” and just as the shrill, impa- tient cheers of his victorious comrades rang out Wildly on the bat- tle-breeze, Weiglitinanis devoted spirit passed away from earth, followed
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CM1925Jun174.tif
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info:fedora/mu:255470
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. ' tions on Gowns and Teddies will be worthy of your in- $10.00 Spreads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..S8.;’-0 . -+ . 8- 959 5&1“? N295 3“ ‘3l'19t195 On)’ 1" Stralg t s1.oo Gowns and Teddies .................. ..79c WHITE GOODS Renew Your 33; case lots of 24 cans of one kind and size, you $125 Gowns and Teddies .................. ..95c
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LondonNews1913v143p1048
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info:fedora/mu:352000
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THE ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS, DEC. 27, l9l3.~ 1092 IN BIBLE LAND : PHOTOGRAPH BY UNDERWCXE “ AND DWELT IN A CITY CALLED NAZARET Ann Urmxnwoon. THE SPRING WHICH MARY, THE MOTHER OF JESUS, MUST HAVE VI TED MANY HUNDRED OF TIME53 AT A PUBLIC WELL IN NAZARETH. In the second chapter of St. Matthew it is written: “But when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judaea in the room of his father Herod, he
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Savitar1985p450
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info:fedora/mu:308598
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Harbeson House , Francie Baskett. ROW TWO: Grethchen Holder, Noriko Iguchi, Linda Walter, Linda Dudenhoeffer. ROW THREE: Cindy Gash, Lori Davis, Barb Buck, Mary Manig, Jennifer Nauss, Linda Nadler. a .n m G S; .0 n.. a I F lo. I a C E N O W O R Hucherson
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CM1924Apr189.tif
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info:fedora/mu:212587
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; white, 50'. @ 501cc: & Builders‘ hardware at Renie's.i 9c: M-33'. htr 2oo-.idt-., (future'—July. $1.03 1-2: , . 7-8. E 'i. “V. in _'-. - 1 4 VI ‘ ---- sf -3137 i ' '7 §, DAUQQTERE stoop FAILS rat: wonasnor..,asraa-rsinsgrasa apprise . nn _ Wheeler: and “Are We All Tuned ‘n. .3 Ti 3:: ::ii'.:i: 1924 _,_ . ._:EIl..l.; itpéaovsa "ii ASONS ltxwggn o
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savitar1900p0200
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info:fedora/mu:38982
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on the Missouri-Ne braska debate. D-caring. Kramer. and VVard selected for the Missouri~Nebraska debate. Junior caps, mule banner, class rush, $12.35. Fire in London. 1748. Sophs. wear a smile as big as the ’02 painted on the columns. I Some mules kick a can of paint against the columns. Medics get well. up on the columns. A medic leaves the Ilniversitv with regrets. Planet Pallas discovered, 1802. Hnt
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LondonNews1913v143p601
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info:fedora/mu:352000
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-vromisedcunpaignontheundquesaonon Healsodrewathantiontothefactthntmuchcultivablelnndisgivenupentirelyto -nottInd¢u1*i'*°°¢‘“‘°""'““"7€*me~ Hepointedoutuntmnumberoi October n,withaspeechtoanundieneeofsome25oop¢op|¢inu.¢sk.fingmnk atnedford. AlII00¢flI00¢°flth¢PktformweretheEarland0o|mteuBeauchnmp, gnmekegpgshgdina-euedfromgoooin1851toz3,oooin,9,,,'meg,enumbe, LordAshbyStLed:ers.LotdLucas.LordS-yeandSele.andLordAhereonmy. oflabourenhadgoned0wnby6oo,ooo. Con1ingtothequ
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Savitar1978p153
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info:fedora/mu:304008
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h J 1 for the Tigers was something they'd like to forget. Individually, Brad Droy, Stan Ray and Tom Dore failed to live up to their respective billings. The only Tiger player that approached consistency was second—team all-Big Eight selection Clay Johnson. The season ended as Missouri blew a 16-point halftime lead at home against Iowa State. But the second annual Big Eight Post
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lex023p0295
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info:fedora/mu:334765
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with chrysanthenum flowers, Budd- ha’s hands, peaches and peach flowers, bamboo leaves, etc., made during the reign of the Emperor Kang Hei. (1662 to 1723 A. D.”) To this de- scription is added the follow- ing: “Note—-This is a most rare, valuable piece which, both in quality and workman- ship and in perfection of pre- servation, is probably unique. A cracked specimen of the same kind of work was sold in 1900
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Savitar1972Pt1p054
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info:fedora/mu:28157
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. If we’re turning out 5,000 mediocre people a year . . . the taxpayers are getting cheated. In addition, of course, the student’s getting cheated. If we can’t cater to the individu- al student to some extent, I think we’re missing the boat. DOWNING: To what That’s the issue here. JOHNSON: I’m not saying neces- sarily tailor a curriculum to the desires of each student, stamping them all “A.B.” . but I
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Savitar1971p541
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info:fedora/mu:300233
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STEPHENS HOUSE MCREYNOLDS HALL ~1.©0'.-‘*.0°!°.~ Jan Kestler Andie Ferretti Mary Jane Mackcy Jan Ford Debl)ie Bleger Joyce Garrison Marilyn McFarland Jackie Crim Nanci Remington Kathy McKeever Patty Bradford Dottie Caiter Mary Frank Lee Ann Googe ~ lo. 16. 17. 18. 19. Beverly Taylor Nancy Stiegemeier Peggy VVestl)ay Donna Kesslinger Sharon Stephens Carol Clark Marti Blakely Becky (lard
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irishindustrialziiip0158
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info:fedora/mu:32289
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158 IRISH EXHIBITION, ST. Louis, 1904. Percy, Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 39 Plunket, VVm. Conyngham, Ist Lord . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I06 Plunket, VVm. Conyngham, 4th Lord . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I57 Plunkett, Oliver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I2 Ponsonby
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civk000037p0006
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info:fedora/mu:367418
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6 other relations of life are burdened with care, and have more than enough to do ‘B p I believe that it is, and that by no act of your lives have you rendered more unquestionable service than by this enrollment of the “ Old Guard,” playfully called the Silver Grrays—--in Latin phrase, the “Panes conscrz',m‘i”——of St. Louis. There is but one successful way of teaching others, which is the way you have adopted———by example. You are here practically declaring your sense of obligation to do your utmost for the main- tenance of law and order. Not how little, but how much can I do ? And by this free--will offering of time and labor, to place our city in a condition of permanent and sure defense, you are giving the best possible evidence of genuine patriotism and true loyalty. Tlie war in which we are engaged is, on our part, if justly con-— sidered, a war of defense. To save the country from ruin, to put down armed rebellion, to rnaintain the constitution and the laws, is the work which the nation has undertaken to do. It is called, sometimes, a fratricidal war, but parricidal is the right term: child- ren against the best of parents, subjects against the mildest of all sovereigns, the most inexcusable and wicked attack upon lawful authority that history will ever record. It is not a war of conquest, but of just and righteous self—defense. It was forced upon us, and could have been avoided by our present rulers only by the loss of national existence. For the miserable imbecility of the olc “public functionar ,” who permitted things to come to such a pass that we were almost conquered before resistance began, the historian may find some excuse, founded in pity or contempt, as we look with compassion upon the imbecility of second childhood, when it is “ sans teeth, sans everything.” But to have lost such a heritage as ours, to have witnessed the disruption of the Union without a blow struck. in its defense, would have been impossible for any people having a spark of courage left, or not hopelessly devoid of self-respect. In the loyal States it is, therefore, a war of defense, and can be condemned, if at all, only on the extreme doctrine of non-resistance. If we are beaten in it, it is as a man may be driven from his house or plundered by robbers, and -all the wrong and suffering attendant upon the legitimate defense of our native land, is chargeable upon the aggressors.
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civk000024p0175a
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info:fedora/mu:367427
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oounasn AND ACTIVITY‘ or MAJOR MGKENNY. 17 5 Governor Carney, General Sanborn, General Lane, and the principal officers with both armies, and citizens Who had participated in the battle, stopped I at a farm house for consultation and refreshment. The pursuit of the retreating rebels was main- tained by Colonel J ennison with the 1st Brigade, and arbattalion of the 53d Colorado, Captain Green, who
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civk000024p0142
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info:fedora/mu:367427
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142 ARMY on THE zsonnnn. Soon afterwards the dead were gathered up and returned to Topeka, where they were re-buried with public honors. A monument is to be erected over their grave. M The‘ number of prisoners captured by the rebels was one hundred and two. The number of killed was thirty, ten of whom were killed after surrender; one being shot for a bushwhacker by our own troops, through a sad
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