Word: found
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...rule on the calling of a baseball game the CRIMSON yesterday gave the score of the Princeton game as 3 to 0, whereas it should have been 7 to 0. The four runs made in the uncompleted seventh inning were not counted in, but it has been found that the runs should be scored, as Princeton had already given the Harvard team its half of the inning...
...stockholders must be drawn from some quarter where men of integrity are to be found of continuous residence in or near Cambridge, of sufficient devotion to the interests of the student body to make them undertake what must be at best an unalluring task, and who are, at the same time, constantly in touch with student life and sentiment so as to be conscious of student needs and amenable to student public sentiment. Obviously, no body of men meets all these requirements better than the combined Faculties of the University--the older and tried portion of the teachers devoting their...
...liabilities upon them. It is therefore necessary to inform them that no such liability is imposed, that it is not the business of the officers to sign leases, and that as a matter of fact there are no "leases" upon which the name of an officer is to be found. In a single case the President endorsed the terms of the CRIMSON's lease when the Society took the CRIMSON's old quarters. It is submitted that this is not ground to justify their statement in regard to the signing of "some leases." We may, therefore, lay aside any argument...
...CRIMSON of May 26 it is stated that a committee of Directors found, on making enquiries looking to a lease of a certain property for a term of years, that the Society was not considered a very desirable tenant. On asking a member of the above committee for information on this point I was told that a certain man had refused the Society unless it was incorporated. Feeling that there might be some mistake, I went to the man who had refused to rent to the Society and told him what I had heard. He declared that he had said...
...which the Society bought and the price at which it sold; and how that margin was divided between expenses and dividends. The Directors believe that public opinion will prevent any future body of shareholders from depriving the ticket-holders of those safe-guards of their rights to be found in such statements as were submitted at the last annual meeting. H. R. MEYER