Word: moneys
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...would be stampeded through without difficulty; consequently the silver men on the finance committee were constantly trying to force the committee to a report; they did not care whether the report were favorable or unfavorable, all they wanted was to get the bill before the House. The sound money men adopted a policy of delay, and have succeeded so well as to practically kill the bill for this session. But the silver men are all confident that free coinage legislation must come sooner or later. The members of the Boston delegation were sharply cross-examined by these men, some...
...direct appeal from the management comes to us. He needs one thousand dollars more in subscriptions, and the class doesn't seem disposed to give it. The question appears to be a very simple one: Is the crew to go to New London or not? Unless the money is raised by a certain time, the athletic committee has said that the crew shall not go to New London. That decision seems to be clear enough to the average student, but is evident that the freshmen do not understand it. If they have sense, they will take in the situation...
...subscription list appears to be not the fault of the collectors, though they can doubtless do more. The fault is that the class has not given all that it can. Although at present such a contingency seems impossible, the freshmen need have no fear of giving more money than is wanted. If any should happen to be left over, it would be applied to the support in the coming years of the '94 class crew; not handed over to the graduate treasurer. But this view of the question is aside; the main thing is, that unless the freshmen come...
...Juniors who have signed for the class dinner tonight must secure their tickets before the dinner. The committee cannot undertake to collect the money from the men at the dinner, and dinner tickets will, therefore, be collected at the door. Tickets can be secured at Leavitt and Peirce...
...ways in which it can, at any rate, be relieved: The first is by cutting down the running expenses of the teams; the second is by combining the finances of the teams, so that, under one management as far as possible, they can be run together, and money saved by the combination of the various interests, which now pull apart rather than together...