Word: contracted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Class Day Committee has awarded the contract for caps and gowns for this year to Messrs. Cotrell & Leonard of Albany, N. Y. This is the only firm officially recognized by the Committee...
...fences and so on, through work in the hotels and restaurants of the Republic, and through the salaried positions in its government, the citizens may earn money; and for the more ambitious, proprietorships of the hotels and stores offer chances for very profitable investments on capital saved. Breach of contract in business or other disputes may be brought in suit and tried in the courts of the Republic, under judges elected from and by the citizens. Boys who perhaps have never associated idea of "law" with anything but the thought of a policeman who was to be hated and avoided...
...Trowbridge Atkinson of the class of 1894, died of pernicious malaria at the United States Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, Virginia, on November 10, after an illness of about ten days. After graduating at the Medical School in 1898, cum laude, Dr. Atkinson held various positions at the Medical School, was contract surgeon in the government service in the Philippines in 1900-1901, was appointed assistant surgeon at the United States Naval Hospital, Washington, June 22 1901, later returning to Boston on the receiving ship "Wabash." In November, 1901, he was appointed surgeon on the U. S. S. "Prairie," a position that...
...recent contract the University has secured about 500 tons of soft coal and has 50 tons of hard coal left over from last year. The outlook for further supply is practically the same as that of any other corporation using a large amount of fuel. One of the largest coal companies in Boston, however, has assured those in charge of the College supply that they will not be allowed to run short. No difficulty has been met with in burning bituminous coal in the grates which heretofore have been used entirely for anthracite. With care the present supply will last...
Final plans have been made for the addition to the brick building which contains photographic negatives at the Observatory, and the work of construction began yesterday. The building contract has been given to H. A. Bellamy & Co. of Boston, and the cost of construction will be about $7,000. The extension will be thirty-four feet long, twenty-nine feet wide, and thirty-four feet high and will contain seven rooms. There will be no basement, but the building will rest on a specially constructed concrete foundation. No wood is to be used in construction, except in the doors...