Word: lose
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Undergraduate publications are apt to lose sight of the fact that the University, as well as the editors, is held responsible, and is judged and criticized for any intemperate utterance. If the editors were publishing the "Monthly" purely as a personal venture, and if the "Monthly" did not purport to be a magazine, representative of the literary ability and taste of the University, the editors might feel at liberty to publish anything within the postal regulations. But the "Monthly" calls itself the "Harvard Monthly," and is circulated as a Harvard undergraduate magazine. Its responsibility to the University is clear...
...good meeting. Partisan animosities are now well under control and most people are aware of their own ignorance or lack of insight into the fundamentals of the conflict that finds half the civilized world in arms. Under such circumstances, there is everything to be gained and nothing to lose in free and fearless discussion...
...tennis tournament. The final round will be contested today and tomorrow, 1916 playing 1917 on Jarvis Field at 2 o'clock. Courts are reserved for contestants, but players must supply their own tennis balls. Men are reminded that they must appear within 15 minutes of the appointed time or lose the match by default. Scores of all matches must be posted on the chart at Jarvis Field by 6 o'clock on the day of play...
...Jarvis Field at 3 o'clock; W. Hugus 2L. and W. T. Badger 2L. vs. H. D. Holmes '16 and A. S. Peabody '16. These men are reminded that they must appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time, or lose the match by default, and that scores of the matches must be marked on the score card at Jarvis Field by 6 o'clock tonight...
Players are reminded that they must appear within fifteen minutes of the appointed time or lose the match by default...