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Word: neglected (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...student who is dropped for neglect of his studies into a lower class shall be debarred from taking part in intercollegiate contests until the end of the next academic year, or until be is permitted by the Faculty to rejoin his class...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Final Settlement with Pennsylvania | 5/1/1893 | See Source »

...student who is dropped for neglect of his studies into a lower class shall be debarred from taking part in intercollegiate contests until the end of the next academic year, or until he is permitted by the Faculty to rejoin his class...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONSTITUTION OF HARVARD ATHLETIC TEAMS. | 3/4/1893 | See Source »

...development of his artistic temperament - is told in an interesting article by Pierre Millet, his younger brother. With this paper is an engraving by Closson of Millet's painting "The Sheep-Shearers." At intervals for the last few years the Century has been calling attention to the neglect of the Yosemite Valley Commissioners to employ exact supervision in the care of the floor of the Valley. There is a long editorial review in this number of the situation with quotations from the official report of an agent of the Interior Department. It argues strongly in favor of receding the Valley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CENTURY. | 1/3/1893 | See Source »

...prescribed course, perhaps, receives less thought or work from students than English C. The freedom of the course, the voluntary attendance at lectures and the few forensics called for makes it easy to neglect it. Five forensics, at intervals of six or eight weeks, are a small number and is easy to do the work in a slurring manner; still further the subjects for forensics are often such that, unfortunately, the work done is not always original. Yet the course, if undertaken seriously as it should be, has more than the little value students generally attribute to it. Few undergraduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/17/1892 | See Source »

...inclined to agree with the writer that athletics have grown to be an ideal too predominating and overmastering in our colleges; that physical education with college men has become, perhaps, too interesting and absorbing to the neglect of mental education. We do not mean to undervalue athletics, to cry against them or advocate less interest in them. They are important factors of a college life, in bettering health and morals, and, by intercollegiate contests, bringing colleges into a desirable closer contact with each other. But the recognition that college athletics predominate too much is not confined only to outsiders...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/3/1892 | See Source »

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