Word: either...or
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...drag about a stick he can't carry for two consecutive minutes. Let him not play the drum at midnight, nor boast of wild feats he never attempted, nor attempt wild feats he can never perform. Little boys should be seen and not heard, and not seen too much either...
...that of last season. In the first place two of the best men in the rush line have gone. There seems to be no available material to fill the vacancies. Robinson, '89, is a good man, but he cannot fill Captain Corwin's shoes as end rush, nor can either Pratt, '88, or Cross, '88, do the work done by Buchanan last season. The rush line will therefore be weaker than last year, and rather lighter. It is doubtful if it will average 165 pounds whereas it ought to average at least ten pounds heavier. Wallace, the best end rush...
...Morning prayers begin October 3, at 8.45 a. m. No seats will be assigned, either for officers or classes. The preacher to the University conducting morning prayers may be found at Wadsworth House 1, every week-day from...
...flung his hat in the air in giving vent to his joy. Probably no one knew better than Yale's enterprising, go-ahead President how much good that victory and the other victories won by the blue-clad athletes were worth to the university. The American youth is essentially either an athlete himself or a lover of athletics, and when he arrives at that stage of life at which he enters college the athletic reputation of the college has much to do with his selection, especially when he is allowed to make it himself...
...conscienceless sportsmen. But it is, and has been, assumed that these contests have been between gentlemen; that it was the honor of their university that they were seeking to advance in entering into them, and not that they were encounters gotten up for the purpose of filling the pockets, either of the oarsmen themselves or of their friends, with money obtained through fortunate wagers. Yet it is unquestionably the desire to influence bets that has led to this unnecessary secrecy prior to a race; for, as one of the "Century's" writers points out, if one crew can row better...