Word: overlooking
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...providing the University with a suitable Museum of Fine Arts. We are thoroughly in sympathy with the writer of the article. However admirable is the spirit which prompted the head of the Fine Arts Department to recommend a postponement of the erection of the proposed building, we cannot overlook certain reasons which seem to us to outweigh his objections. To wait fifteen or twenty years until the original sum has increased to the proper proportions, seems a needlessly long time and there ought to be some quicker and equally advantageous way of bringing about the same results...
...unreliable changeable sort of work is put an end to, and that the team begins to make some steady, effective progress. The blame of Saturday's game cannot be laid on the shoulders of any one or two men. The whole team is responsible for it. The college can overlook one such exhibition, but others like it would be more than unfortunate; they might even be disastrous in turning college sentiment against those who are trying hard, and can, if they only will make up their minds to rise and meet the present difficulties, develop a team which will represent...
...question that now concerns men in the present senior class is whether the Faculty will consider that any of them has been so misled by precedents that he has made a radical change in his college course that it would be unjust to overlook. Otherwise the standing rule will have to hold and no man will be allowed his degree of A. M. without a year of work taken after...
...preacher took for Lis text the words from lsiah, "He planted an ash tree and the rain did nourish it." In the course of his remarks Dr. Books said that in college life men are too apt to be obsequious to the rich and popular fellow and to overlook or slight the brave, earnest man who happens to be poor or unpopular. A man's life can be developed fully only by considering his supernatural part, by maintaming toward rich and poor a sincere, christion demeanor. Then only, with careful regard to its nourish men, can the tree...
...must be a matter of gratification to the instructors in English to perceive the interest taken in the addition to the "English Select" department of the library. Such a convenient arrangement of standard books brings to our notice many works which we, engrossed in our daily work, might otherwise overlook. The communication we publish in another column reminds the gentlemen who have the filling of the new book shelves in charge of the omission of the works of Cardinal Newman. We quite agree with the writer when he urges the advantage to be derived from intercourse with writers of late...