Word: losses
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...eager young students. Fortunately one of them has not yet secured his bondsman's signature and may still withdraw; but the other one seems liable to find in store for him the same trouble that previous innocents have had before him. The worst of it is that, after the loss has been sustained, there will be no recovering from the confidence man, for he will have fulfilled his contract to the letter. For three or four successive years he has played the same game. His unlucky victims contracted for six hundred dollars worth of calendars (one thousand of them...
...Book Committee is glad to make a financial report to the class that shows a profit rather than a loss. The balance is $465.90, of which $60 has already gone to clear the entire indebtedness of our Freshman year. Although all of the money for advertisements has not been collected as yet, the probabilities are that more than $300 will be sent to the Sophomore class treasury to start this year...
...Association is to be run this season along the same lines as last, when it proved so successful in giving an opportunity to hear the best opera at reasonable prices. The chairman for this season, who was appointed last year, has not returned to College, and a confusion and loss of records and accounts has resulted, which will cause a delay of about a week. Further announcements will be made in these columns...
...July 31, 1912, of over $27,000. The total receipts were$157, 359.18 as against $112,097.93 for the year ending July 31, 1911, an increase of about $45,000 due chiefly to University football profits. The statement shows a total profit of nearly $28,000 as against a loss of $10,000 for the previous year. The self-supporting sports were football, baseball, and hockey. The unusual increase in expenses on the tennis courts was due to resurfacing of a part of the courts. This statement does not include the guarantees paid to visiting teams or the expenses directly...
...sincerity are absolutely essential to real worth in social service. From a man who does not carry interest and conviction in his work, a club of boys will seldom derive much benefit, and it is frequently a mistake for such a man to continue. The CRIMSON believes that the loss in numbers of upperclassmen engaged in social service is more than compensated by the earnestness of those whose activity has not declined with the conflict of other interests. Social service is progressing on its merits to a position of recognized importance in college life...