Word: funds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...elaborate 600-acre country seat, "Reynolda," the U. S. entered the War. Out of the War came mass-smoking of cigarets, with Camels a U. S. favorite. In 1918, the year "R. J." died, Reynolds were producing more than 20,000,000,000. This accounted for the trust fund of $60,000,000 for the four Reynolds children...
...term bills is a step to a firmer athletic financial policy, but it can hardly be expected to finance even a tenth of the whole program. If the University is to continue its boasted policy of "Athletics for All," there must be created some sort of endowment fund to supplement gate receipts and make budget balancing a somewhat less ephemeral procedure. Certainly the difficulties into which the H.A.A. has fallen this year to a real service in laying bare the tottery financial foundation of Harvard's ambitions athletic program...
...During the year 1931-32 the assistance to undergraduates amounted to $260,254, classified as follows: scholarships, $184,490; beneficiary aid, $11,551; loans, $64,213 (including $14,530 from the fund which is under the control of a board of trustees in Boston.) The amount awarded in the form of scholarships was approximately $5,700 greater than in 1930-31 and was the largest amount of scholarship aid that has been distributed in the history of the College...
...jail!" shouted the Welshman, and he rehashed his dispute with Sir Robert Home as to what they both said at Cabinet sessions in 1922 (when Sir Robert was Chancellor of the Exchequer and Mr. Lloyd George was Prime Minister) about the terms on which Great Britain could agree to fund her War debt to the U. S.-an operation subsequently performed by Stanley Baldwin after the Lloyd George Cabinet's fall (TIME, April...
...director in more than 40 corporations, often attends 16 meetings in one day, keeps four secretaries on the jump. His favorite game is poker, which he plays with a fierce intensity. His good golf is best when he is behind. For the locker-room he has a vast fund of anecdotes. Innumerable people "Al" Mr. Wiggin. Even usually sardonic Financial Editor Carlton A. Shively of the New York Sun confessed last week: "The grief shared by the staff of the Chase Bank at the decision of Albert H. Wiggin to rest from his labors ... is understood by hundreds of persons...