Word: neglections
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...Secretary that all returns from men who desire to be permanently connected with the class should be made before the Easter recess, in order to insure a complete class report. The experience in other classes has been that men who put off mailing the blanks until after that time, neglect to do so altogether, and in that way greatly hinder and complicate the publication of the first class report. Men who have lost or mislaid the "literature" previously sent them may obtain new blanks by notifying the Secretary, Box D. Cambridge...
...only his right to do so, but his duty; his duty both to the nation and to himself. Each man should feel that, if he fails in this, he is not only failing in his duty, but is showing himself in a contemptible light. A man may neglect his political duties because he is too lazy, too selfish, too shortsighted, or too timid; but whatever the reason may be it is certainly an unworthy reason, and it shows either a weakness or worse than a weakness in the man's character. Above all, you college men, remember that if your...
...present time few Seniors have sent in their "Class Lives." Experience has proven that the longer men delay filling these out and sending them to the Secretary, the greater is the chance that they neglect them altogether, and as a result the completeness of the class records is impaired. All men wishing to be permanently identified with the Class of 1907 should send in their "Class Lives" as soon as possible. Men who have not received blanks, or who have lost them, may obtain others by sending a postal card to the Secretary, Box D, Cambridge. The fact that...
Those of us who used to study only the facts of history, Secretary Shaw said, to the neglect of the logic of history have missed the most important as well as the most interesting portion The number of battles in a given war, their dates and the officers commanding are non-essential, but the causes and the unexpected results of the war are of prime interest. No man planned the great republic as it is today, nor even anticipated the present condition of the states. Nothing was ever further from the present homogeneous republic than the thirteen original colonies, differing...
...pictures alone give striking evidence of the great benefit which Dr. Grenfell's work has been to the sick and aged of the inhabitants. The hospitals, the hospitals ship, and the long tours of Dr. Grenfell with dog teams have saved many a sufferer of accident, disease, neglect and ignorance from a painful death. Dr. Grenfell called his missionary work unconventional, in that he looked after their welfare by founding co-operative stores and mills, by opposing fraud and oppression, and by using the medicine case more than the Bible. He has also started schools, set up weaving looms...