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Word: funded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...Library needs a permanent fund for salaries, cataloguing, and bibliographical printing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BREVITIES. | 1/23/1880 | See Source »

...differ wholly from the Advocate as to the duty of each Senior in subscribing to the Class Fund. In all previous classes it has been held obligatory for every man to contribute to the full extent of his means; and we trust that the members of the Class of '80, who have always been so liberal in their contributions to subscription-lists, will not fall behind in subscribing to the Class fund, the last and most pressing call upon the liberality of the present Senior class. The fund is a class fund, for the purpose of defraying all future class...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/23/1880 | See Source »

...Class Secretary of '80 has thought it worth while to answer at some length the article in the last Crimson on the College Fund, I should like to define my position a little more clearly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COLLEGE FUND AGAIN. | 1/23/1880 | See Source »

...certainly did not intend to advise "that the College Fund be discontinued," and I think that this meaning can hardly be drawn from my language. I have no objection to a College Fund, provided that every one is left perfectly free to subscribe or not, as he sees fit. In the case of many other subscriptions, - for instance, those to the Class Fund and to the University Crew, - a man cannot very well refuse to subscribe, unless he is absolutely unable to do so. About these subscriptions, then, as well as some others, there is, and very properly, more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COLLEGE FUND AGAIN. | 1/23/1880 | See Source »

...writer in the Advocate, whom I will call A., attempts to show that a subscription to the College Fund is something which every one should feel called upon to give, on account of the obligation which every one is under to the College. By the words College and Alma Mater, he evidently means the benefactors of the College. Our debt to the College is our debt to its benefactors. But in what way is this different from our debt to others who have lived before us? Granted that a student cannot perform certain every-day acts "without receiving that which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COLLEGE FUND AGAIN. | 1/23/1880 | See Source »

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