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Word: pay (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...been asked to report a bill appropriating $7500 annually to Dartmouth; the grant to be made for two years until the Wentworth legacy becomes available, and also to remit the payment of $15,000, which, under the agreement on which Culver Hall was built, the college has to pay the state in case of a separation from the Agricultural College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/25/1893 | See Source »

...University, to make part of its exhibit at Chicago. The question was considered at a meeting of the club, and it was decided to undertake the task. The size adopted for the pictures is 14x17; they will be mounted suitably and all similarly framed. The College will pay all the expenses of the work, and the pictures will be sent as an exhibit of the Harvard Camera Club. They will be chiefly the exteriors of the buildings, taken either singly or in groups, as may seem best...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Exhibit at Chicago. | 2/2/1893 | See Source »

...There is no question but that if the paper was held as private property the growing number of students and the increasing support would make it as valuable a source of income to the editors as the HARVARD CRIMSON or Yale news which pay the expenses of the fourteen or fifteen men who do the actual work on them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The "University News." | 1/24/1893 | See Source »

...property, as this quotation seems to imply, but are distinctly college organs, with editors chosen from the students at large, and with columns open to every member of the Universities. The University News is also very wide of the mark in the statement that the CRIMSON and Yale News pay the expenses of the editors. What surplus there may be is divided among all the editors on the CRIMSON, and among the senior board on the Yale News, but in neither case does the money represent the value of the work done on the paper or does...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The "University News." | 1/24/1893 | See Source »

...Soldiers' Field could not have come to us at a more opportune moment. During the past year and a half the field has been filled in and carefully levelled and is now ready for the final arrangements for the various athletic sports. In the meantime the sum to pay for this was being collected from the graduates, and the amount collected from those in New England has reached $47,000. It is expected that when $50,000 have been raised, the graduates in New York and elsewhere will contribute something. We have had no part in contributing to the fund...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/21/1893 | See Source »

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