Word: outlay
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During this week Coach Cowles has made several shifts of account of the recent development of some for the players. W. P. Dixon '25 and Carroll Harrington '24 have each and a chance at the first position on team A, but neither has been able to outlay consistently Captain E. M. Hinkle '23. F. S. Hill '24 has made a rapid rise from team B by ousting F. I. Carpenter '24 from the last berth on team A, while A. L. Smith '25 has held his position by his unusual steadiness. Team A will play its match tomorrow with...
...same story with the criminal courts, where the machinery is hopelessly clogged for want of enough money and magistrates. The cost entailed in providing the police with up-to-date equipment and the courts with enough magistrates to clear the dockets is relatively small when compared with the enormous outlay constantly being invested in private ventures. Americans are notoriously stingy about any expenditure that savours in the least of public service, and correspondingly extravagant in satisfying the private wants; but thorough going support of the police is one part of the public service that cannot wait. It is one thing...
...family, whose income, by the reduction of wages or for other reasons, has been cut by 30 percent of its former total; we may say, for argument's sake, that the said family will try to get along with the new means of budget by dispensing with the outlay of comparatively unnecessary things, in order to sustain the lives of the family...
...preference, experts favor a squadron of flying machines, whose power in time of war is only equaled by their commercial use in time of peace. The evidence plainly indicates that the present battle fleets are becoming herds of "white elephants", and therefore are failing to justify the annual outlay of millions of dollars for their maintenance...
...immediate needs of the school are a building and a larger teaching staff; the former calling for an immediate outlay, the latter for an endowment of no mean proportions. Taking into consideration the University's present high cost of operation, with its resulting annual deficit, the problem becomes extremely difficult, especially in view of the still uncompleted Endowment Fund drive. It would seem, however, that a drive for funds for the Business School would make a particular appeal to men not graduates of the college, who themselves, have a vital interest in the development of business efficiency. The training given...