Word: neglectment
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...heritage of freedom and democratic ideals for which earlier generations struggled and sacrificed. We cherish this heritage more deeply when we see it attacked by a totalitarian threat. We are resolved to defend it from the menace of rival systems from without and from the degradation of abuse or neglect from within...
...their prospectus seems to neglect the all-important fundamental of how they plan to cram seventeen weeks worth of knowledge into the heads of their students in twelve weeks. In the stuffy heat of a Cambridge summer between June 29 and September 19 any undergraduates who wish to hasten their graduation will attend two lectures a day five times a week. For his work in this period a student will receive the same credit as he would in the seventeen weeks of the fall and spring terms attending at least the same number of, classes a week. Apparently the summer...
...standing by," Dean Kennedy continued, he does not mean a complete neglect of the world's affairs, but he thinks that each student should be "trying to maintain a sense of balance within himself, within the College, within the community, and within the Nation...
...Junior or Senior not on the Dean's List whose last class before or first class after the Christmas recess is in a course in which attendance is regularly taken, absence will not mean immediate disciplinary action, but such absences will naturally be regarded as an indication of neglect of work if a student's record becomes unsatisfactory...
Indeed momentous were the beginnings made by the missionary of whom Author Gather wrote, Father John B. Lamy. He became Santa Fe's first bishop (in 1875 its first archbishop), mightily revived Catholicism's failing strength in the Southwest. Unlike the Bishop of Durango, he did not neglect the outlying parts of his jurisdiction. To Colorado in 1860 he sent another famed pioneer Catholic, Father Joseph P. Macheboeuf, first Bishop of Denver when it was still a village...