Word: either...or
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...books in the library will be in greater demand than ever. It is to be deplored that there is seldom more than one copy of those books to which the various instructors most frequently refer. This fact, however, is aggravated by the carelessness or thoughtlessness of some students, who either leave the books they consult on the tables or-what is worse put them on a wrong shelf. Hence other men finding empty spaces where they expected to find books conclude that the reference books are in use. Greater care on the part of everyone who uses the reserved books...
...formidable proportions when examinations are being prepared for, and it is well worth while to say a few words concerning it. It must be evident to everyone that, when a section is directed to read a book of which there may be perhaps two copies reserved in the library, either great care must be used, or else the majority of that section will not even see the book. That this care is used we do not believe, or rather to put it in a better form, we do not believe that sufficient care is generally exercised...
...subscribers to the Lampoon, who have been annoyed by any irregularity of delivery of papers, will confer a great favor by notifying the editors at once. Hereafter no Lampoons will be delivered to subscribers at Sever's, but either by carriers or by mail. Address...
...When I drew his attention to the fact," continues Turgeneff, "that 'Wallenstein's Camp' was by Schiller, and not by Goethe, he answered: 'That is all the same thing-Goethe and Schiller, they are fruits of the same tree; and believe me that I know, even without having read either of them what a Goethe could say and did say, and what a Schiller could write and did write...
...This room is admirably lighted by a continuous row of twenty-two windows near the ceiling. The reading desks are ranged in semi-circular lines and afford accommodations for 212 readers. The reading-room is separated from the book-room by the main corridor and delivery desk, while on either side are the rooms for cataloguing and administration. The book-room is constructed on what is know as the Harvard plan, and, besides ample provisions for enlargement, affords present accommodations for 108,000 volumes. In the second story are fitted up four rooms for the use of professors and students...