Word: losely
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...wild Irish prose, it sparkles and it glows. It fulfills all the needs-of word, if not deeds. And if Cuba we lose, we can heal up the bruise With 'the charm of his fine Irish smile...
...with Lloyd's of London, which would pay $50,000 in the event of his death. But it was also payable for the loss of an eye or limb. "Why would he go that far," asked his son Martin Resnick, "when he could have arranged an accident to lose an eye or limb just as easily?" Even his story of being a cancer victim did not hold up. An autopsy disclosed that he was suffering from a heart infirmity, diabetes, and hardening arteries-and nothing more...
...royal carcasses. Henry VIII might have solved such a problem by beheading the critics-a solution the Daily Express lampooned in a sly Giles cartoon (see cut). It is a measure of monarchy's waning power that in modern England a prince's only recourse is to lose his temper...
...unknown quantity of the unit is sophomore Lew Williams. As crease attackman he must replace Dave Bohn, last year's top scorer. No team can lose a scorer like Bohn (97 goals in two seasons) without feeling it but Williams has looked good in practice. Though his quick-stick is slower than Bohn's, he moves around more and picks up more loose balls. The team needs a big scorer. "What Williams does will make a lot of difference," according to Munro...
...obstacle remains for the blissful couple--Prof. Mathiez ("a feather from the left wing"). Oozing onto the stage he exclaims, "You have nothing to lose but your brains--I mean chains." His threat is mitigated when it is revealed that he is really the father of Grendel, i.e. Grendel's mother's ("mother of Grendel, an anti-social type") husband. Charisma and Beowulf then sing of the joyous life they will have together as the defeated Mathiez writhes in the corner: "We'll just be petty bourgeoisl...