Word: costs
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...insurance, $1020; and for water, $651. To the General Account is charged the office expenses, the salaries of those connected with the office, and all incidental expenses which cannot be properly charged to any special sport. To the item of Permanent Improvements were charged last year labor and cost of filling for the reclamation of about five acres of Soldiers Field, this ground being much needed for scrub games. It is planned to spend practically all of the available surplus each year in reclaiming more of Soldiers Field, and in making other permanent improvements. Among those which it is desired...
...tremendous and ever-increasing cost of armaments has made the movement towards universal peace of vital importance to all thinking men. An address dealing primarily with this subject, therefore, by one of the foremost advocates of world peace (as Count Apponyl certainly is) should be of the utmost importance to all serious students in the University...
...dance committee has engaged three dray wagons to be placed at the disposal of members of the class who are furnishing boxes. These drays will call at the rooms of the men in the various boxes and will transport furniture to and from the Union at a cost of $1 per box each way. The man in charge of each box must leave word at the Union office before 1 o'clock this afternoon if the men in his box wish to make use of the wagons engaged by the committee...
...appointment of the Co-operative Society as official purchasing agent for the University is worthy of comment. The saving in cost and convenience which this new move should effect is shown by the fact that during the year 1909-10 the different officers and departments of the University used more than eighteen thousand dollars' worth of stationery, and purchased this from no fewer than sixty-seven different stores in Boston and Cambridge...
...cost of the buildings will be about $1,200,000, of which $100,000 has already been raised. The money now available was obtained by a committee appointed by the Overseers, consisting of Dr. J. C. Warren '63, chairman, Professor J. M. Crafts '58, former president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mr. E. Thomson, of the General Electric Company, Mr. J. D. Pennock '83, of the Solvay Process Company, Mr. C. Richardson '77, Mr. C. H. W. Foster '81, Dr. M. Loeb '83, and Dr. A. F. Forbes '04, and will be employed in building the first laboratory...