Word: either
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Schoenemann's series consists of six lectures in German given every Tuesday evening. Tickets for single lectures will cost 50 cents apiece for students and may be secured either from Dr. Schoenemann, 7 Avon street or at the Cooperative Branch...
...which was won by the University when Captain Bingham beat Overton to the last corner and won by a yard. Coach Donovan has not yet decided finally who the fourth man, on the University team will be. J. Coggeshall '18, J. W. Feeney '18, H. W. Minot '17 and either J. D. Hutchinson '19 or A. R. Bancroft '17 will run. The Yale team will be composed of J. W. Overton, H. S. F. Cooper, L. Marshall and H. C. Rolfe. All except Marshall ran for Yale last year. With Overton to run the last relay, Yale appears to have...
...creditable but not valuable. Mr. Allinson contributes two poems, "Die Gotterdammerrung" and a sonnet. The first is chiefly in unrhymed pentameters, with nine-syllabled verses interspersed. Its workmanship is imperfect, and its lines tend to monotony; yet it is impressive in its dignity. His sonnet "Umbra Naturae" again shows either carelessness or radical doctrine as to versification: it begins with a nine-syllables verse (unless we give two syllables to "here"), and ends with what looks like a rough Alexandrine, but may be a badly accented pentameter with two trisyllabic feet...
...either case it is not sonorous enough to be self-justifying. Like most undergraduate writers of sonnets, and many older writers, Mr. Allinson is still more or less at the mercy of his form, as the words "all the world is fay" too plainly reveal: unsatisfactory workmanship clogs much of whatever poetic thought the sonnet contains. Mr. Code's sonnet is specific and lively; but it contains a nine-syllabled verse, and an Alexandrine. The latter can scarcely be intentional, since it is not the final verse. The sonnet form is so exacting that it is seriously damaged by stray...
Trials for the University teams will start on Tuesday, February 13, when all candidates are to report in either Harvard 5 or 6 at 7.30 o'clock prepared with a five minute speech on either side of the question. The next trial will be held the following Thursday in the New Lecture Hall at 7.30 o'clock, at which time ten-minute speeches will be made. The final trials are scheduled for Saturday, February 17, in the New Lecture Hall at 7.30 o'clock. At this time the Coolidge Debating Prize of $100 will be awarded to the winning speaker...