Word: developing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Nation-wide in its scope, this body hopes to make for better referee work since all men wishing to enter the Association must pass a rigid examination. An attempt will also be made to develop young officials, so that there may be someone to take the place of the older ones when they are no longer able to continue their work...
President Morgan then dealt with the theoretical element especially involving the make up of personality. He accepted the generally conceded fact that a man's character is moulded largely by his surroundings, but stressed the point that the remaining part must be developed by special conditions. "This is what we endeavor to do at Antioch", concluded Mr. Morgan, "by elements in the curriculum differing widely from those of other colleges. Liberalists make for training of intelligence almost exclusively, while technical institutions seek to develop the technical side, but what we wish to do is to devise a complete combination...
...heard and studied, where there are countless modern and adequately organized churches reaching out into and serving all phases of the life of a city. No man will be a minister who does not supplement his class room work with actual laboratory work. And this School aims to so develop its laboratory opportunities, that every student may have training in practice as well as theory. This field work may be either voluntary or "compensated". If "compensated" it will provide a man a good measure of self-support while in the School...
...order to develop that class unity and fellowship so essential both during College years and later as graduates at reunions and alumni meetings, the undersigned past and present officers of the Class of 1924 unanimously endorse the plan for having each class spend its last year in the yard, and urge all members of 1924 to room next year in the Senior dormitories...
...occurred to his that with the control over the Union, their influence over a section of the Press and their secondary in the social clubs, the Americans will soon assimilate Oxford?' while another remarks that "Instead of a culture peculiarly English, Oxford" (with the admission of Americans unlimited) "will develop into the cosmopolitanism characteristic of the transatlantic liner...