Word: neither
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...inches, and Stingle failed at 5 feet 8 1-4 inches. Putnam followed suit at 5 feet 9 1-2 inches but Sweeney and Paine both cleared the bar. It was then raised to 5 feet 10 3-4 inches which was cleared by both; but neither could clear 5 feet 11 3-4 inches. Paine won with an actual jump of 5 feet 10 3-4 inches, W. E. Putman '96, second, with an actual jump of 5 feet 8 1-4 inches; and H. M. Wheelwright '94, third, with an actual jump of 5 feet 6 inches. Paine...
...Lost Pueblo" is a fanciful story of the sole survivor of a lost race. It is written by Verner L. Reed. The fiction of the number consists of two short stories, "The Salvation of a Missionary" by E. C. Martin, and "Mr. Burbitt's Bible Class" by Marvel Edwards. Neither of of them is very good. The number is unusually rich in short poems, two of which are very good, "The Courting Stick" by Mary Stansbury, and "The Mirror" by Basil Tempest...
...doubt as to her sincerity and fairmindedness. We trust her plan may be one which others may care to adopt of their own free will. We will gladly cooperate with Yale, or any other college, by taking measures for our own purification. But to us, coercion in athletics, seems neither manly nor sportsmanlike. Rather, let our own standard be such that others may see it, admire it and follow...
This conclusion, it seems to us, is inevitable. We do not deny Princeton her right to do as she pleases in the matter. Neither can Princeton deny Harvard her right to place her own standard. It can be said authoritatively that Harvard will never agree to narrow her athletics down to a strictly college basis. It would seem, then, that future contests between the two universities must cease permanently unless a compromise is effected, by which Princeton will broaden her stand. If she, for her own reasons, declines to do this, there are other universities, whose rapid growth of late...
...this text practically and logically it seems absurd, for it violates the very first principle of logic. But when we come to spiritual facts, we cannot measure them by physical laws. The law of the Conservation of Energy does not apply with regard to honor and fidelity and patriotism. Neither does anything that lives or grows obey this inflexible law. The physiologist's first principle is that the body dies in decaying partially at every instant. At every stage of its growth every organism not only is, but is passing away from what is. Moreover, nothing can exist in only...