Word: manifoldly
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...analysis of the resources for moral instruction is then the central question of modern education. There is in human nature a deep stratum, underlying the results of training. A rich manifold of instinct, containing the material from which good or bad conduct may evolve. This manifold of instinct is plastic and may be moulded, so that from nature arises second nature. The instinct of pugnacity may be transformed into a desire to fight for good...
...cost of over $1 a books. It was planned not only to supply the demand of the student body for the publication but also to make possible for students and alumni to send copies to high and preparatory schools, colleges, and libraries throughout the country. In this manner the manifold student activities and interests of the University would be brought before people interested, as well as prospective sub-Freshmen. Unfortunately the plans and expectations of the Register Board miscarried. Eight hundred volumes are still on hand. It is hoped that the student body, the preparatory school clubs, territorial clubs...
...different from that of any play that the club has produced and offers large opportunities for vivid acting. Mr. H. T. Parker '90, dramatic editor of the Boston Transcript, says, "The short plays that the club has previously acted have been of many kinds. This spring they promise manifold excitements...
...Freshman Dormitories are designed to furnish at the start the environment in which all that is best in the manifold richness of college life can develop naturally and rapidly. Their object is to plunge the new-comer at once into the life that the upper classmen have learned to value; to teach him what it means to be a member of a community gathered together for serious aims,--a body large enough to include men of different associations, from all parts of the country, and not too large for every member to count for something...
...president Lowell says in the introduction: "The University Register gives by far the best view of the organization and manifold activities of the College from the standpoint of the student, and therefore it is eminently fitting that it should be published by a body representing the students themselves." To this we heartily agree, and wish to add, moreover, that the Register is one of the most useful works which the Student Council has yet accomplished...