Word: either
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...makes frequent use of cheaply sentimental phrases. "A Junior Partner," by C. R. Saunders '01, is a character study in which a mood is described rather than suggested. "The Revelation," by W. Stevens sC., is a remarkable bit of work in which the characterization or plot, if it contains either, can be revealed only by prolonged study. "One Shall be Taken, The Other Left," by B. F. Bassett '97, is of the Fireside Companion order...
...considered that men who work or sweat for Harvard are entitled to receive favors: for that they are doing more than giving football players good seats for their families or intimate friends is painfully plain to all of us. But in acting up to this belief the management has either discriminated most unfairly,--or has been guilty of a carelessness which is no less unfair. For while some prominent individuals have received 80 tickets and over in advance of the sale, others, almost as prominent, have received none--among them a member of last year's 'Varsity crew, the editors...
...second trial for the Princeton debate will be held Saturday at 7 in the lecture room of the Fogg Museum. Speeches will be ten minutes in length on either side of the question. The judges will be Professors J. B. Ames and G. P. Baker, and Mr. I. L. Winter. Following is the allotted order of the speaking: 7, P. E. Fitzpatrick; 7.10, E. Mayer; 7.20, R. D. Crane; 7.30, R. C. Bruce; 7.40, J. Frank; 7.50, F. G. Bauer; 8, H. B. Kirtland; 8.10, W. Morse; 8.20, E. P. Bennett; 8.30, F. S. Bayley; 8.40, H. A. Yeomans...
These fellowships will be awarded chiefly on the basis of a competitive written examination which will be held March 13 to 17, 1900, at Athens, Rome, and at any of the universities or colleges represented on the managing committee of either school...
...Chamberlin, Secretary for the Colonies, finally took up the case of the Outlanders and proposed that they either be allowed to vote, or else be given a municipal government of their own. A conference between President Kruger and Sir Alfred Milner resulted in a great deal of discussion, but no tangible result. Offers by the English government were all refused, and the alternative suggestion made by President Kruger was so hampered by conditions as to be impossible of acceptance. Mr. Chamberlin's reply to this suggestion was by no means mild, and from this time on negotiations became more...