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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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civk000029p0060b
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info:fedora/mu:367420
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ltfifi BATTLE1;FIELD WILS 0N’s CREEK,Mo., Aug‘. 10, 1861. Want H()E.LCKE.Captmn a11i1Ar1d}.A.€Le C U s Anny % C1}i£‘fEI.L€?:'Departn1§ of{heMo. ‘ ' %. ,4 un(,>x:“:. S.D}1IPAETI\d‘.’.° 01:‘ '1‘HE'Mow_S‘%' ‘LOUIS,1_865. Scale . kg _ g,‘ =2-Jul E-‘?z.z'oIz, nun Corzfedenue LA rm M’ "“ M4‘-W ',,.2»""' 3“, 3§1r.mI:£s' " %%3-T-Tficamp 4
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irishindustrialziiip0077
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info:fedora/mu:32289
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99- T00. .IOI. I02. I03. I04. 106. I07. I08. 109. THE IRISI-I-AMERIC;-XN HISTORIC LOAN COLLECTION. 77 Volume, entitled: “Officers of the Regular Army who served in the Civil War.” This volume contains a portrait and sketch of Gen. Thomas W. Sweeny, "U. S. A. Loaned by William M. Sweeny, I20 Franklin street, Astoria, L. I., N. Y. Portrait of Brig.-Gen. Thomas ‘W. Sweeny, U. S. Army (retired
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SacredChimesp048
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info:fedora/mu:33532
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No. 42. The 0rphan’s Marching Song. A. J. HOLT, D. D. “Thou art the helper of the falherIess."—Ps. 10: 14. J. M. HAIGAN. D Q Qulfkfiep t,'m(.‘ Copglght. 1900, by John «J. F. Kyger. ‘ . ' :‘ —‘ . ' §e—;+=::l—;;:—_+pg,:..:%;;::k=s—e .- * — -t 3'? IN.‘- . We're a band of chil-dren. Gathered here and there,Fmm a oo1d,dark " world a-stray, . For ‘we have is II‘a- the
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CRS8721Apage13
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info:fedora/mu:25845
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of $900 will be taxed at the child's rates. 0 C. Examples where the child has itemized deductions and both kinds of income. 1. The child has $300 of compensation income and $1,200 of unearned income. The child has $400 of itemized deductions (remaining after the 2% limit) which are directly connected with the production of unearned income.
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Savitar1947p105
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info:fedora/mu:280938
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. This job is especially adapted to House Presidents’ Council, for it represents every woInen’s residence on campus. OFFICERS NANA BERREY B. J. WEIMAN Page 101 President Secretary
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civc000059p0122
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info:fedora/mu:367423
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by the leaders of the sect, there is an article invit- ing free negroes and mulattoes from other states to become I Mormons, and remove and settle among us. This exhibits them in still more odious -colors . . . [this] would corrupt our blacks, and instigate them to b1oodshed.””3 - 7° Holcombe, p. 263. «I 71 Issue of September 16, I84I. 72 I-Iolcombe, p. 266. 73 Quoted by W. .A..Linn, The Story of the Mormons
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civc000052p0285
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info:fedora/mu:367435
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€ T/ze Baiile of I/Vz'[.s'cm’s Creek. 28 5 leading them to death or to victory. Wscze the rest of Pearce’s brigade forming on the opposite hill and about to bring their bright muskets ‘ _into the thickening fight, muskets that had not yet been tarnished by the smoke of battle. And all through the valley that lay beneath him he could see Missourians, and Texans, and Arkansians --» men who had as yet taken no part in the des— perate fight that had been raging since day-dawn, ——————thousands of men, taking heart again as they got used to the din of war, and clutching their shot- guns and rifles, resolved to be “inat the death.” lrlesatv all this and more; and there was no hope left within him but to dash upon Price with all ‘ his might and crush him to the ground before these gathering forces could come to his help. He now brought every available battalion to the front. “The engagement at once became general, and almost inconceivably fierce along the entire line, the enemy” (these are the words of Schofield and Sturgis) “appearing in front, often in three or four ranks, lying down, kneeling, and standing, and the lines often. approaching to within thirty or forty yards as the enemy would charge upon Totten’s battery and be driven back.” ' Neither line of battle was more than a thousand yards in length. Price guarded carefully every part of his own. Wherever the danger was greatest and He could also i
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civm000013p0060a
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info:fedora/mu:367422
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said, “I thought Yankees had horns.” I replied, “As a rule they have, but I e am a l\/Iuley.” s I The next night would bethe night ofthe fourth day, and I promised the show would come off then. iTherefore, eleven o’clock I was A turning handsprings anddancing to amuse them, asthey thought, but I had ‘ to keep up cour-pi I age,fo1‘, I felt satisfied that the dog‘ had landed
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civm000004p0052
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info:fedora/mu:367429
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52 A Border City in the Civil War by which slavery south of 36° 30’ should be protected in the territories. In demanding no more than this, many of them thought that they were making very generous concessions to the North, since they believed that, under the Constitution, the Southern slaveholder had , the undoubted right to go into any territory of the United States with his human chattels, and there be protected in both person and slave property. In the third place, they announced that they Would not sustain the Union, if the general government should attempt to coerce the seceded States. They declared that they would neither aid their seven erring sisters in making an attack on the Federal government, nor the Federal government in coercing the States that had left the Union. This View was urged by Mr. Howell on the floor of the Convention in a resolution, a part of which was, “We earnestly remonstrate and protest against any and all coercive measures, or attempts at coercion of said States into submission to the general government, Whether clothed with the name or pretext of executing the laws of the Union, or otherwise. And we declare that in such contingency Missouri will not View the same With indifference.” This resolution in- timated, and it came out clearly in the ensuing debate, that if the United States should attempt to compel by force the collection of the national customs in the South, such an act on the part of the general govern-- ment would be regarded as coercion. This is suificient to reveal the true character of the conditional Unionists. They afiirmed emphatically, “ we are in favor of keep- ing Missouri in the Union, if the Northern States will guarantee the execution of the Fugitive Slave Law, protect slavery in the territories south of 36° 30’, and the general government will not even in the execution
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lex050bp0136
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info:fedora/mu:334724
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136 11. Qlué éfianb, Eme. 92aI[t)3 (& (So.)—Gf)icago 3[I., gefiffinacfboflet Qlufifieflung im’ »Libera1 A1-ts«=®eBc'iube mbgen bie Qiilbet gut 8itetatutgefc[)ic{)te, fiit ben gen: gtapf)ifc[)en unb 3oo[ogifc[)en llutetridpt, (S5IoBen uub Qanbfatten [)etvotge[)oBen tvetben, Qlnfcbauungflmatetial, moi? in Begug auf S2‘,tefi[it{)feit unb Ggaftbeit ben befien beutfrben Beifiungen biefet Qltt na
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civc000078p0134
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info:fedora/mu:367474
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134. THE STORY or THE GUARD. ‘ “About four o’clock I arrived on the high- est point on the Ozark mountains. Not see- ing any sign of the enemy, I halted my com- mand, made them known that the enemy instead of four hundred is nineteen hundred. But I promised them victory if they Will be what I thought and expected them to be. If any of them too much fatigued from the fifty--six miles, or sick
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sav1994p0190
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info:fedora/mu:323504
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finished the I993 season tied for After a 22—ll record in 1992, the best in nearly ten 190 ° Sports PHOTOS COURTESY OF SPORTS ll\lFOR/\/\AT|Oi\l Baby, Broken Bones Bog Team sixth place in the Big Eight, the Tigers did pull a few surprises. Oklahoma came to Columbia on Halloween weekend in a tie for the first in the Big Eight, and left the Hearnes Center in second place after being upset in five games
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Evangelp389
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info:fedora/mu:33529
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No. 162, I'll Be a Sunbeam; 7b my grandson, Edwin 0. Excell, Jr. COPYRIGHT, W00, BV E. O. EXCELL. Nollie Talbot. woans AND mgsuc. E. 0. Exccll. n# h . “fir r~ 1.‘ Fm iii-t—:4-I-— A--1 __ _ —‘ - 4 1 4 ' L2! 1* 1* 1* 1*‘ 1‘ 3- :1» -4- J , ' 1. Je - sus wants me for a sun-beam, To shine for Him each day; 2. Je - sus wants me to be lov - ing, And kind to all I see; 3. I will ask Je
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