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Word: rendered (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...late hour very near the rooms of several football men. Exactly the offenders who were responsible need not be known. They certainly showed a lack of spirit that was disgraceful. By simply keeping absolutely quiet after ten o'clock at night, the members of the University may render a valuable service to the football team, and thus materially aid Harvard's chances for success on Saturday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOW TO HELP THE FOOTBALL TEAM. | 11/22/1911 | See Source »

...Meyer Bloomfield '01 was the next speaker and dealt with "Some Fundamentals in Volunteer Social Service." He defined social service as a trained and persistent kind of friendship which every man must render in his life. The right kind of social service is to the social life of the great community, what efficient engineering is to industry. It discovers hitherto unknown valuable by-products in the members of the community and is constructive and educational. Good social service requires that the workers give all they can to their boys and take in return what the boys can teach them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Speeches at Brooks House | 10/4/1911 | See Source »

...order to make the training of candidates for the Freshman team more thorough and effective, a graduate coach will be secured this fall who will through-out the year give his entire attention to the Freshmen. Coaches Donovan and Quinn, as heretofore, will render all the assistance that their time allows to Freshmen. It is hoped that this additional coaching will be of material assistance in turning out better Freshman track teams. In order to encourage fall work by Freshman candidates a special fall meet for Freshman only will be held on Soldiers Field October 20. At both the fall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Plans for Track Work | 9/28/1911 | See Source »

Third, your committee has already been able to render a practical service to the city as well as to the College, in appearing by four out of five of its members at the recent hearing at the State House in opposition to the bills for the taxation of college property. The position taken by your committee at that hearing was that the citizens of Cambridge in general are not only against such taxation, but are earnestly desirous that the good name of the city should no longer be imperiled by the repeated efforts of a single individual seeking for notoriety...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard and the City of Cambridge | 6/13/1911 | See Source »

About three years ago a group of students in the Harvard Medical School conceived the idea that a medical institution in China, undertaken and chiefly manned by Harvard medical graduates, might render good service to the science and art of medicine, and would offer an eminently useful and beneficent career to well-equipped young men who were willing to devote their lives to medical teaching, research, and practice in China. The institution was thought of both as a medical mission and a research laboratory. After consultation with several persons, conversant with the medical and missionary situation in China, the young...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Medical School in China | 6/9/1911 | See Source »

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