Word: renders
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...surpass it. The retiring editors from eighty-five have done much to advance the cause of daily journalism at Harvard, -just how much can be appreciated by those who have been in a position to watch their efforts to promote the interests of the CRIMSON. To them we would render our hearty thanks for their untiring labor, and from them we accept the management of the paper in the hope that "their mantle may not have fallen upon unworthy shoulders...
...advice of Dr. Sargent, enforced by an order from President Eliot. As this state of affairs was made known to Captain Latham only a few hours before the race, it was impossible to meet the emergency, since the substitutes were not sufficiently accustomed to rowing in a shell to render them of much service. Under these circumstances the crew pluckily determined to pull the race with six oars rather than to withdraw from the race altogether. The six men were seated in the following order: 1, Latham; 2, Brown ; 3, Dewey; 4, Codman; 5, Hamlin; stroke, Harris. The next crew...
...their cost that the capabilities of this crew were greatly underrated. At all events we may congratulate ourselves upon the prospect of witnessing a race that is a race, today, if the weather favors us, for, barring accidents, the proficiency of all the crews is such as to render anything like a "procession" well nigh an impossibility...
...given to the Dean and the Registrar next year. Both these men have been severely overworked of late years, and if the nine comes out victorious in many games this spring, the increase in the amount of business to be done in U. 5 will be such as to render a term of rest, not an undesirable object for the above mentioned officers of the college...
...lateness of the hour at which last night's reading was finished prevents us from giving a detailed criticism of the recital. The reading was the best of the series. Difficult as it is to render Shaksperian comedy well, Mr. Jones showed himself to better advantage in interpreting the subtle and delicate fancy of the great master than he did in his previous readings, with the tamer and less exacting productions of Dickens and Longfellow. In the reading last night Mr. Jones seemed to feel greater sympathy for some of his characters than for others. The uneveness, however...