Word: summing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...children will be given two weeks at camp by means of funds which up to this year have been used for the annual Phillips Brooks House dinner, according to E. S. Amazeen '31, graduate secretary of the House. Well over $130 was spent last year for the banquet, a sum which will pay two weeks' stay in camp for about 15 Boston children...
...balance sheet for the Houses, which shows the deficit of over $50,000, does not include the dining halls, which made a profit of $70,000 in the first year of their operation. This sum was not used to make up the deficit for the Houses but was used to furnish funds for the emergency employment program of House...
...mortgage. The bonds would bear 4% interest, guaranteed by the Treasury. John Homeowner would pay 5% interest to the Government on his reduced mortgage, would have 15 years, with the possibility of a three-year extension, to make principal payments. The Government would also offer John Homeowner a small sum at 5% for repairs and payment of tax arrears...
...months the R. F. C. has lent U. S. railroads the sum of $365,782,843 with which to meet taxes, hire workers, pay off creditors, replace equipment. If these loans are not repaid the U. S. Government will some day find itself the proprietor of most of the railroads in the land. In his campaign speech at Salt Lake City last year Franklin Roosevelt put the carriers on notice that they could not look for an unlimited flow of credit from his Administration. He was ready to help them through the slump but they, in turn, must accept more...
...which the hearers have usually heard once before. Perhaps a more satisfactory system would be that used in French 8, where the lesser writers are often passed over entirely both in lectures and reading, which gives time for the others to be covered more pleasantly and fully. Taken in sum, it is a useful course to have had, but one takes it rather for the reading than for the lectures...