The President's Report to the Board of Regents for the Academic Year ...: Financial Statement for the Fiscal Year

Front Cover
 

Selected pages

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 3 - ... interest in the general reader. Without the enlivenment of living instruction, it is too dry for ordinary use. Freeman, Edward A.— General Sketch of History. 16mo, London and New York, 1873. This little book is one of great merits. Not only was it written by a very eminent historian, but it is admirably adapted to the purposes for which it was designed. Primarily it was meant for schools ; but it is also well calculated to be useful to a large class of other readers. It may be said to have...
Page 40 - THE ALBERT PLAUT CHEMICAL CLUB FUND Established in 1912 with a gift of $5,000 by Mr. Albert Plaut, of New York. The income is to be used for the benefit of the Chemical Club, and primarily for providing lectures before the club by men of distinction in the field of industrial chemistry or a related science.
Page 10 - Hayti, a right and practice suggested and supported by considerations of humanity only, it is to be hoped that the day is not distant when the enlightened nations represented here will deem it wise to abolish it.
Page 41 - By the terms of the will these scholarships are to be given only to candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Arts, who excel in the Greek and Latin studies required for admission to the University ; and they are...
Page 3 - Board of Regents : I have the honor to present to you my Report for the year ending June 30, 1875.
Page 31 - Treasurer reports the receipts of $837,851.24, and disbursements amounting to $855,573.01. The following summaries show the sources of income and the purposes for which the expenditures were made: Summary of Receipts, Shotting Sources of Income, for tlie Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1903.
Page 4 - The rapid and continuous increase in the number of our students, the need of the very best facilities for instruction, the enlargement of the plant for heating and lighting, which the addition of new buildings or the enlargement of old ones calls for, have compelled us to incur an expense which we would gladly have avoided. Indeed, nothing but the limits to our means prevent us from carrying still further this work of construction.
Page 4 - Large as it is, there is every indication that owing to the strong inclination of students at this time for engineering branches every foot of room in it will be needed by the time it is ready for occupancy. Let it not be thought that we are constructing more buildings than are necessary. The rapid...
Page 35 - ... but this sum should not be considered as an actual addition to the income of the University, but rather as a reimbursement for the cost of material and special supplies purchased by the University for students
Page 4 - Hospital. the erection of this structure and also what we regarded as the necessity of adding $5,000 from the University treasury to fire-proof the upper part of the building. But we thought that we should hardly be acquitted of blame if from lack of secure...

Bibliographic information