Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...York Life's leadership is also shown in its greater promptness, completeness and frankness in report-making. Its annual report for 1895 was published January 11, 1896, and contained a complete schedule of its bonds and stocks, with interest rates and market values. Real estate schedules are also published for distribution to all who ask for them. The report is made after methods understood by the public, upon the basis of business completed and money actually received and disbursed, without the old-time padding and cross-entries...
...York Life's leadership is also shown in its greater promptness, completeness and frankness in report-making. Its annual report for 1895 was published January 11, 1896, and contained a complete schedule of its bonds nad stocks, with interest rates and market values. Real estate schedules are also published for distribution to all who ask for them. The report is made after methods understood by the public, upon the basis of business completed and money actually received and disbursed, without the oldtime padding and cross-entries...
...York Life's leadership is also shown in its greater promptness, completeness and frankness in report-making. Its annual report for 1895 was publishen January 11, 1896, and contained a complete senedule of its bonds and stocks, with interese rates and market values. Real estate schedules are also published for distribution to all who ask for them. the report is made after methods understood by the public, upon the basis of business completed and money actually received and disbursed, without the old-time padding and cross-entries...
...copied in several papers and is calculated to do much harm. It is said that President Eliot addressed the students as they passed his house, telling them that he would put a stop to all athletic contests if the celebration continued. No student in the University would believe this report for a moment, but outsiders, who know very little of Harvard, may be imposed upon. To these we would say that there is not a word of truth in the story. It is the invention of an unscrupulous reporter, who probably wrote up the whole account of the celebration without...
...surprise and regret that the Cambridge Tribune has copied this story directly from the Boston journals. We should have thought that the editor of this enterprising weekly would have found three days sufficient time in which to prepare an original and far more truthful account. We feel that the report will more readily gain credence in the outside world when it appears in a paper published in Cambridge...