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

EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON.- The gymnasium may be a good place to increase the muscle, but that physical gain will hardly compensate for the loss in towels, soap, and other paraphernalia necessary for gymnasium work, which some poor individual seems to be continually suffering. I am one of the several miserable wretches who, thinking that the crossbars above the lockers in the lower part of the building are especially intended as the proper place wheron to hang towels, had the misfortune to hang mine there. I had the use of it for about three days, when it mysteriously disappeared. Thinking that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 12/20/1887 | See Source »

...loss will be a severe one to the many friends he had made by his unfailing courtesy and kindly disposition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Charles Henry Minot, Jr. | 12/3/1887 | See Source »

...third time since their graduation the members of the class of eighty-six are called upon to mourn the loss of one of their number, Charles Henry Minot, Jr., (A. B., 1886) of the second year class in the Harvard Law School, who died at his home in Boston after a short illness, on Wednesday last...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Charles Henry Minot, Jr. | 12/3/1887 | See Source »

...They dictate to their employers, whose business they strive to rule; (b) they have sanctioned violence, and even aided in murder; (c) they persecute non-members; (d) they prevent the employment of capital, cause stagnation of business, and, hence, great loss of wealth; (e) they drive many of their members to crime and dissipation through loss of employment.- F. W. Taussig on south-western strike in Journal of Economics, Jan. 1887; Chicago Tribune, Feb. 13, 1887: Nation, Vol. 42, pp. 338, 401, 402, 418, 440, 441; also Vol. 43, pp., 469, 470; Boston Herald, March 21, 1886; Bradstreet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 12/3/1887 | See Source »

...portion of the faculty, especially when it is known that a few administrations since the converting of the school into a feeder for one college and the giving to it a sectarian character, alienated the support of the Phillips family, which support has never since been recovered, and the loss of which has cost the institution a great deal of money. No matter with what ostensible object such a club should be formed, its ultimate purpose would be to increase the size of the Yale delegation. Any organized action tending to influence men in their choice of a college would...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Note and Comment. | 12/1/1887 | See Source »

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