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Word: neither (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

Teams A and B alternated in scrimmaging with the substitutes in hockey practice yesterday afternoon. Team A first lined up against Team E and scored 2 points against 0 for the latter. In the scrimmage with Team F which followed, neither team scored. Team B then defeated Team D by the score of 3 to 0 and followed this by a 0 to 0 draw with Team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INACCURATE PASSING A FAULT | 12/6/1913 | See Source »

...consolation prize to a candidate who failed to get a marshalship. Occasionally, a popular athlete finds himself landed in a position which he accepts as a token of the good will of his classmates, before he understands the strenuous duties it involves--duties for which be may have neither taste nor aptitude. During the past dozen years several secretaries have been chosen who reside in distant cities. Experience shows that distance is an almost insuperable handicap, both in collecting news and managing class reunions. We have before us letter from two distant secretaries both conscientious and willing men, who deplore...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 12/5/1913 | See Source »

...twice at football, and has won four out of the last seven annual series in baseball, and six races in succession at New London, it is evident that "rattling tactics" have not produced the effect desired at New Haven. Not only Harvard men, but neutrals who belong to neither university, and a saving remnant of Yale men themselves, deprecate a practice which mars the pleasure of witnessing athletic contest. Verbum sap. SPORTIOUS ANTIQUUS. (Reported from Alumni Bulletin

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 12/5/1913 | See Source »

...Harvard," say some with a finality that spells a Crimson victory. But who ever heard of odds on Yale, reasonable or unreasonable? "Harvard has a better record," say others, forgetting that games are not won on records. Harvard tried the record policy in 1910 and Yale in 1911, and neither won. "Yale has the old Yale spirit," say still others, who do not know that there is a Harvard spirit of less fame but no less power. Spirit counts, but who can say, "Here, is a true fighting spirit; there, is none?" In the end it is a question...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHEN HARVARD PLAYS YALE. | 11/22/1913 | See Source »

...applied satisfactorily to this new structure. Mr. David Dagget, secretary of the committee, disposing of two other possibilities as follows: "The word 'amphitheatre' does not quite express the idea of the new structure, as Greek amphitheatres did not have seats below the level of the ground; the building is neither oval nor circular, but elliptical. The same objections will apply which has often been suggested. The arena in a Roman amphitheatre applied only to the area on which the shows were executed, and this was generally sanded; the name was derived from that portion of the ground. The word 'Bowl...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE STRUCTURE OF GREAT SIZE | 11/22/1913 | See Source »

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