Word: outlay
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...class race with Yale does not call for an unreasonable outlay; it serves as a stimulant for an excellent sport. The University favors a race for the class championship on the river...
...Associated Powers. Her system of agents and propagandists--with the exception of a certain number who have been taken into custody during the war is as complete as ever; the controlling force is acting under a new name, but that is almost the-only-difference. No effort and no outlay of money is being spared to mould opinion in America to a favorable view of Germany's plight. Nothing is overlooked that might create a breach between Allied troops and the Armies of the United States. It is in these phases of present German activity that the University must take...
...games and take trips away from Cambridge, it is essential for the Association to economize in every possible way. The outfitting of teams is quite impossible, let alone supplying the great number of other men who should be encouraged to compete. This financing of athletics which, after the initial outlay, would not be very considerable, should be undertaken by the University. In fact, the whole athletic system might well come into the University's jurisdiction instead of being in the hands of an allied organization. In that case the Bursar, at the direction of an athletic committee, would have...
...seen that if equipment were provided more men would be given the advantage which they cannot now afford, and as the Athletic Association is clearly unable to make this its function, the University should devise some method whereby it could better control the financing of athletics, and purchase the outlay which is so essential to the physical development of its students. R. McA. LLOYD...
...project has been financed partly by subscriptions from graduates, and partly through the efforts of the undergraduate CRIMSON board. The building including the cost of the land, will represent an outlay of between $55,000 and $60,000. This fund has been steadily growing for the past four years, and is now complete. The erection of the building is in the hands of a graduate committee composed of the following: Karl S. Cate '09, of Boston; Payson Dana '04, of Boston; Thomas W. Lamont '92, of New Yark; Charles E. Morgan, 3d, '88, of Philadelphia; and Mr. Henry M. Williams...