Word: either...or
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...members of the senior class who wish to order pictures from negatives already secured can do so at Amee's between 10 A.M. and 3 P.M., either today or tomorrow. Also those who ordered pictures before the fire can obtain them at the same place. The sample of the heliotype albums is on exhibition at Bartlett's, and all are urged to see it at once. Subscriptions, with deposits of $5, must be made before next Thursday either at Bartlett's or with the chairman of the committee. If one hundred names are not secured by that date the album...
...requested by Dr. Gray to invite the members of the society to attend Lenten services at St. John's Chapel. The services are daily at 8 A. M. and 5 P. M. Attendance at either of these services may be substituted for morning prayers at Appleton Chapel by application to the registrar. The morning service will be fifteen minutes, the afternoon twenty-five. On Tuesday and Thursday afternoons there will be brief addresses. The Lenten services in the society room, 17 Gray's, will be daily at 5.45 - a brief service except on Wednesdays and Saturdays. On Wednesdays services during...
...back of the class list furnished each member of the class by Messrs. Pach. As all extra copies of these class lists were destroyed by the fire, it is hoped that the members of the class will use those already received. The album order, with deposit, may be left either at Bartlett's or with the chairman of the committee. One hundred subscriptions are necessary, and these must be obtained before Feb. 15th...
There are some parts of the library which are, however, almost unknown to the students, either because we are not permitted to explore them or because we have not the time. The one place, perhaps, most unfamiliar to the average student and most frequented by strangers is the visitors' room. Here are collected more articles of interest to the student of Harvard's history than perhaps in the entire remainder of the building. The class albums; the autograph letters of celebrated graduates, such as Sumner, Emerson, etc., etc., and the visitors' book, are but a few of these objects...
...experiment in the matter of college athletics. First, our own faculty came out with its plan of reform and was partially followed by a number of other colleges. And now Amherst brings forward another plan-that of entire prohibition from inter-collegiate sports, which may be called either bolder or more timid than our own, according to the way in which one chooses to look at it. The plan adopted is more in accordance with the traditions of Amherst than it would be of any of the larger colleges, and we feel positive that it would never meet with success...