Word: neglecting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...positive disgrace that so little has been done by the college to reward the crew for their victories and it will be indeed shameful if this last opportunity for making amends for past neglect be not eagerly seized. Let every one that can possibly do so, sign their names at Bartlett's at once, and let nothing but the most pressing considerations deter any one from being present on Friday night at Young's to give the view a deserved compliment, and to make the dinner in every way a success...
...fact that all those injured in the late boat-house disaster are now in a fair way to recovery does not absolve the college authorities from the charge of gross carelessness and neglect. The accident might have cost several lives, and because things turned out much better than there was much reason to expect, the whole matter should not be slurred over and forgotten. The college authorities were responsible for the accident, and the narrow escape from something more serious should be a lesson to them which no amount of fortunate circumstances, nor any lapse of time, should allow them...
...come here, secure paying fellowships, avail themselves of all the advantages extended for our near neighbors and then, securing positions elsewhere, leave us. With forty-one professors and an income of $225,000, we should be educating a thousand instead of two hundred." All of which seems merely to neglect the argument that it is in this very opportunity for the highest training not obtainable elsewhere that the pre-eminent usefulness of such an endowment as that of Johns Hopkins consists...
...college rooms for class day purposes and those desiring the use of basement rooms for caterers, are requested to notify the janitors before June 15, so that the necessary arrangements may be made. Students will be held responsible for any expense to the college caused by any act or neglect of the caterers employed by them...
...organization. With regard to the duties of the Glee Club to the college, and those of the college toward the Glee Club, I must make a grave general charge against the college. Musically speaking it is at the lowest ebb of indifference. Not to speak of the neglect of the musical opportunities afforded by Boston, the number of students attending Mr. Henschel's concerts in Sanders itself was disproportionately small; while the concerts which Prof. Paine arranged, on his personal responsibility, in Sever, were a failure through the utter indifference of the students, for whose benefit they were intended...