Word: fee
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Moekle of Ford Motor Co.'s auditing department went by train from Detroit to Boston last week, bearing as courier the balance sheet of his company's 1926 business. At Boston he paid the Massachusetts Commissioner of Corporations (Henry F. Long) $10* as a filing fee and the report became the tidbit of public prattle. The annual statement, composed of a few hundred arabic numerals, naturally told nothing of the internal affairs of the Ford Motor Co. President Edsel B. Ford and his father and mother still make that their private business. They own all the outstanding shares...
...North Shore Club offered the use of its course to Harvard students when is became known that the project to make the Weld Course available to students had fallen through. According to present arrangements, undergraduates will be able to use the golf course at any time for a green fee of $2.00, or by special seasonal rates. It is understood, furthermore, that if sufficient men apply for the privileges offered by the club, a reduction in the fee will be possible...
...capacity of alumni and general public to give endowments has all but reached the saturation point. Whence is more money to come? From the students themselves, answers Mr. Angell. As it is, the tuition fee covers only from one third to one half of what it costs the college to educate...
...here again is an impasse. Raising the tuition fee would deprive a number of men of higher education. Scholarships would have to provide their fees and additional scholarships would put further burden on those President Angell says are near the end of their capacity or willingness...
...upon whom increase of tuition would fall. A possible expedient for enlisting their support might be the sliding system of tuition now in existence at Kent School where no boy is excluded because of parental inability to support him, where several parents pay as much as twice the tuition fee, and where the average fee is well over that the school sets as a standard. Objection to this scheme on the grounds of its setting up artificial distinction between students would hardly be borne out by experience at Kent--and in a school of 250, such danger would be greater...