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

...will provide music and other entertainment; there will be at least one speaker outside of the class, and refreshments will be served. Several new forms of entertainment, which will not be divulged until Monday morning, have been chosen. It is essential that all members of 1915 attend and bring cash. Watch Monday's CRIMSON and posters for particulars...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNUSUAL MEETING FOR 1915 | 5/3/1913 | See Source »

Harvard received three mentions in the recent Interscholastic Architectural Competition. In the second class F. R. Witton 1G. was awarded second mention; C. H. Lench sG.S., fourth mention; and H. W. Fox 1G.S., fifth mention. The cash prizes of $90 and $60 respectively in the first and second classes were awarded to W. J. H. Hough, Pennsylvania, and W. B. Rabenold, Pennsylvania. Competition in the first class was open to fourth year and graduate students; in the second class to all other students...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Architectural Students Mentioned | 4/12/1913 | See Source »

Another bequest of securities valued at $22,879 and $2,876.52 in cash has been received from the estate of George Haven for scholarships to deserving students of the first year of the Medical School, the choice of the recipients of which will be made by the Faculty of the Medical School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TWO BEQUESTS TO UNIVERSITY | 4/11/1913 | See Source »

Undergraduates in need of cash--and what undergraduate is not?--will read with interest the terms of the second prize contest announced in the current number of the Advocate. As was not the case last year, the prizes are restricted to undergraduates, and the subjects of the essays are assigned. Six questions are submitted for discussion: they all deal with matters which concern "the weal of Harvard";--two are claimed by athletics; two by matters more strictly academic (not to say pedagogic); and the remaining two deal with what might be called the "social" questions of our College life, using...

Author: By Robert WITHINGTON ., | Title: CURRENT ADVOCATE REVIEW | 11/5/1912 | See Source »

...purchases of members but also attempts wherever practicable to lessen prices to non-members. On the other hand, while the following table shows that the Yale dividend was 15 per cent, this merely represents the reduction made in the price to members at the time of the sale. No cash dividend is paid on total sales at the end of the year. At the University Co-operative Company, University of Wisconsin, there is, in addition to the 10 per cent dividend declared at the end of the year, an alternative 17 per cent dividend to be taken out in trade...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY CO-OPERATIVES | 11/5/1912 | See Source »

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