Word: manifestants
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...sometimes told that after youths are emancipated from the rigid discipline of the school master, they cannot be made to take very seriously any studies which do not have a manifest bearing on their career in life. But if it be true that they cannot be led to work hard in an earnest effort to understand the knowledge slowly wrought out, and the civilization painfully achieved by man upon this planet, then our colleges do not deserve to survive and will certainly...
...place, a dual concert with Michigan in Detroit offered great possibilities for cementing the new friendship started by the football game last fall. At a smoker Saturday afternoon the musicians from the two universities met informally, while in the evening the good relations between Michigan and Harvard were made manifest through the appearance of both organizations on the same stage...
...opportunities to Princeton through errors, the university eleven found it difficult work even to tie them. Practice this week has served to get the team into good shape again, however, and it is confidently believed that the team will show none of the weaknesses against Harvard which were manifest last Saturday...
...here, however, that the defect of this 'quality' of individualism becomes manifest. Individualism and fellowship are more or less incompatible, just as individualism in politics is incompatible with democracy. If one is free at Harvard to develop as he pleases; if one does not feel the restraint or the stimulus of a college spirit brought directly to bear on the individual, he is likewise free to play the fool. He is also free to be unutterably lonely. Without knowing it he may suffer a partial atrophy of his best self. If he finds congenial associates, they are most likely...
...professional critics are no longer of any worth even as individual opinions," and that "as it (Professional musical criticism) now exists it is utterly useless", is to imply the non-existence of the type --lamentably rare, it is true--of well-trained, level-headed professional musical critic--a manifest injustice to the few distinguished men without whom the profession would indeed be discredited...