Word: rendered
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...conditions under which the tickets are sold, Every Memorial and every yard ticket will bear the name of the purchaser on the back. No such ticket will be received on Class Day which does not bear the name as it was originally written. Erasing or changing the name will render the ticket invalid. Intelligent and efficient gatekeepers, who will rigidly enforce these conditions, have been secured...
...endless opportunity for competition, comes surely to the surface, while the intellectual life in which competition is uncertain and unsatisfactory sinks beneath, but still exerts a far reaching and, we believe, an unimpaired influence on the community at large. We see in these contests which arouse ambition and which render the existence of a large number of physically perfect men absolutely necessary, advantages before which the disadvantages sink in insignificance, and among the first of these benefits we are induced to place the feelings of cordiality and respect that are bound to rise between such honorable rivals as Yale...
...alumni. Granting that the ground about the "fence" must some time be used, the conclusion of the corporation is the only reasonable one to draw, although it was the hope of the petitioners that the refusal to place the proposed building there would establish a precedent that would render the corner forever inviolate. We are all disappointed. On us, as undergraduates. the loss will fall most heavily, while we are sure that for many years Yale life will miss one of its happiest and most whole some features...
...result of Saturday's game at New Haven will render the game with Princeton today one of unusual interest...
...about 750 B. C. in the reign of Uzziah in Judah and of Jeroboam in Israel, in a little town near Bethlehem called Tekoa. It was just before the first Assyrian invasion-a time of great prosperity in Israel. He foresaw that the luxurious habits of the Jews would render them an easy prey to the enemy. The book of Amos consists of four parts: the introduction describing the downfall of many ancient cities because of this corruption, then four prophecies of disaster to Israel, then a series of prophetic visions, concluding with a general prophecy of glory and power...