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Word: losely (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...laboratory courses or double-hour recitations from two to four, can not draw reserved books at all. Those, too, who have consecutive recitations at the Museum or Jefferson, can not get books, unless they make themselves late at their second recitation. If they go to the Library they must lose the first part of their lecture. Nor does the inconvenience end with themselves. By the delay they cause to the lecture through their late arrival in the classroom, they trespass on the rights of the rest of the class. We recommend to the Library Council, then, that they close...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/13/1884 | See Source »

...those of us who feel how much manly we are for the game would be willing to run the risks, and would be willing in years to come to have our sons run the same risks. Surely, then. in this country and in this age, we cannot afford to lose any sport that has so great man-making power...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/5/1884 | See Source »

...sacrificing a man's religious belief to send him to Cambridge; and it is with a bitter sense of humiliation that we confess this impression to be partially founded on fact. Not that there is any great amount of open infidelity here; not that a large proportion of men lose their faith. But that a freethinking tendency exists here, stronger than in any other college, is painfully evident. There is no time in a man's life when he is so open to doubt as the years spent at college, and it would seem only right that as much regard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/26/1884 | See Source »

...association, that it keep the use of the court. We therefore urge the treasurer to pay the breakage bill of the man who rents Lyceum Hall from the college, at once, and next spring, some netting must be put up on the windows. We cannot afford to lose the best court we have through the ungentlemanly action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/25/1884 | See Source »

...usual, we are again forced to yield precedence to the New Haven university, for we learn from the Yale press that an offender has been caught, and safely locked up too. It is a good example, this that has been set for us by our sister college; let us lose no time in following it, though somewhat tardily...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/20/1884 | See Source »

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