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Word: assayer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...progressed very satisfactorily. On the floor of the old baseball cage concrete bases have been put in position for the stamp mill and Huntington mill. Another room of the same area as the old cage will be built on the east end of the building and fitted up with assay furnaces and other mining apparatus. All repairs on the building will be completed by October...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rotch Building. | 5/11/1900 | See Source »

...Carey Building, a room thirty by eighty feet, which will have to be dug out to a depth of four feet for the purpose. Another building, about thirty by eighty feet, will be built adjoining the present one on the east side. It will contain the metallurgical and assay rooms. These three rooms will be a memorial to the late Hon. John Simpkins '85, and will probably be known as the "John Simpkins Laboratories." Work will begin in the old cage immediately, but the addition will not be commenced until spring. Plans for the latter are now being drawn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MINING LABORATORY | 1/22/1900 | See Source »

Among the members of the Assay Commission, appointed by President Cleveland, to test and examine the weight and the fineness of the coins reserved at the mints is Professor Jackson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/4/1896 | See Source »

...basement will be taken up by an assay laboratory, furnished with furnaces and complete apparatus, and a room for physical experiments...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Building for Yale. | 1/26/1894 | See Source »

...principal problem of the history of Modern Philosophy has been the reconciliation of the idealistic insight with the demanda of the rigid uter order of nature; to such a reconciltation the concluding assay must therefore devote itself. In the present discussion the chief reasons for idealism are summarized in an independent way, but with a deliberate ignoring of that aspect of truth upon which empitical science generally ways stres; and to which attention will be devoted in the next two lectures, idealism as thus stated must appear abstract and even fantastic. But distiuction of one aspect of the truth from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Royce's Lecture. | 12/11/1890 | See Source »

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