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

...date $200 has been collected for the Princeton band fund. In order that the project may be a complete success, $250 is needed while anything collected over that will be used for mass meetings and a band at the Yale game. All contributions should be sent to L. M. Wright, Thayer 19, or put in the box provided for the purpose in Thayer Common Room...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: $50 More Needed for Band | 10/31/1913 | See Source »

...Gymnasium Committee requests all students in forwarding their contributions to Lee, Higginson & Co., to mark them plainly "for the Gymnasium Fund." This will save the committee a great deal of time and trouble and will facilitate the sending out of acknowledgements of receipts. Any undergraduates who have not fulfilled their pledges are requested to do so at once...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Request by Gymnasium Committee | 10/25/1913 | See Source »

...Junior class, has announced his financial report for the year 1912-13. This shows a sum of $343.69 left to the credit of the class after all bills have been paid. The detailed report is as follows: CREDITS. Balance from 1911-12, 168.55 Class collection, 463.50 Harvard Mass Meeting Fund, 5.34 Red Book, 177.85 Receipts at smokers, 86.33 Interest, 4.87 Total credits, $906.44 DEBITS. Dues to Student Council. $10.00 Smoker November 25, 1912, 133.80 Smoker February 11, 1913, 88.50 Smoker April 7, 1913, 88.60 Smoker May 5, 1913, 223.85 Printing ballots, etc., 18.00 Total debits, $562.75 Total credits, $906.44 Total...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1915 HAS $343.69 IN TREASURY | 10/20/1913 | See Source »

...most widely read of the volumes recently edited is M. T. Copel and's "The Cotton Manufacturing Industry of the United States." This essay was awarded the David A. Wells prize in 1911-12 and is published from the proceeds of that fund. The book sets forth the relative position of the American cotton manufacturing industry by means of an international comparison of geographical factors, technical methods, labor conditions, and industrial and commercial organization. To provide a basis for these comparisons and conclusions, the history of the industry in America is traced and its present organization analyzed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WORK OF UNIVERSITY PRESS | 10/20/1913 | See Source »

...left to the credit of the class after all bills had been played. The detailed report is as follows: CREDITS. Collected at the mass meeting, $49.79 From Student Council Smoker, 17.65 Rebates on kegs, 16.50 From Diner Committee, 609.00 Cigarettes sold, 5.00 Yale Game band fund, 25.01 Interest, 1.53 Red Book, 60.00 Class dues, 600.75 Total credits, $1385.23 DEBITS Princeton game band, $49.00 Student Council for Smoker, 36.15 Student Council for class dues, 10.00 Dinner, 647.00 Printing, 93.57 Yale track meet, 45.00 Yale baseball game, 45.00 First entertainment, 75.00 Second entertainment, 99.75 Third entertainment, 76.97 Fourth entertainment, 77.88 Fifth entertainment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOPHOMORE CLASS HAS $21.46 | 10/17/1913 | See Source »

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