Word: extended
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...extend our hearty congratulations to the class of eighty-eight. Seldom has a class crew rowed a steadier race than the eighty-eight crew rowed yesterday. The race was one of the most closely contested for years, and the winners may well feel gratified at the results. But perhaps the one thing of most interest to the college at large was the position which the freshmen won. Let eighty-nine now make their annual race at New London a certain victory. The prestige with which they will meet their opponents, ought to lead them to sure success. The utmost care...
...Society of Christian Brethren, which by the way was one of the four oldest societies of Harvard College, is "now a thing of the past." Founded in 1802. its life has extended over eighty-four years. This life was ended by the vote which we announced yesterday. In next year's Index will be found the list of some eighty or a hundred men, headed, not "The Christian Brethren," but "The Harvard Young Men's Christian Association." The change in name and in constitution has been made, we understand, after much consideration and debate...
...next issue of the CRIMSON will be on Wednesday, April 14th. We wish, in bidding our readers farewell on this short recess, to extend to them the customary gratulations for a recess. The mill pauses. The grist no longer is ground. Silence is with the visitor as he gazes at our youthful and ardent Cambridge cousin doing his best to kill the sprouting grass...
...unusual energy last serson is not to be doubted. We think, however, judging from present reports, that greater credit is to be won this season, simply by reason of greater energy. To the men interested in cricket, and especially to those who engage in the game, we extend our best wishes. We hope that their club will more than merely live during the coming year...
...name that part of the human organism upon which the health and strength of an individual most depends, I should unhesitatingly say the nervous system. The reflex actions are those produced by some cause exciting a nerve which has its termination in the spinal cord and which does not extend into the brain. Walking, called automatic, is one of the reflex actions. Did all nerves terminate in the spinal cord and none of them enter the brain, there could be no such thing as sensation, and parts of the body might be badly injured without the person knowing...