Word: expect
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...College Library will be open during the Christmas recess from 9 in the morning to 5.30 o'clock in the afternoon, expect on Christmas day and Sunday, December 26. Reserved books may be taken out at 4.30 o'clock in the afternoon, to be returned at 9 the next morning...
...Copeland will read Christmas selections from Dickens, Kipling, Stevenson, and Thackeray in the Dining Room of the Union this evening at 9 o'clock. The doors will be closed at one minute before 9, and all who expect to attend are requested to come a few minutes ahead of time. This reading, which is the first of six to be given by Mr. Copeland in the Union this winter, will be open to all members of the University, whether or not members of the Union...
Forecasts in regard to the football season of 1910 may be unsettled by radical changes in the rules of the game. But it is reasonable to expect that the game will not be so altered that a team which is strong under the present rules will not also play well under new rules. The coming season promises to bring interesting developments, and is quite sure to be a critical one for the game...
...their equipment with the growing importance of the work done in those departments. The achievements in chemistry, even in the unfavorable conditions that have handicapped routine and original work alike, have been of equal value. With modern buildings for their investigations, Professor Richards and his colleagues may reasonably expect to secure results of greater significance...
...more important roles, that of Dickon, in the hands of T. M. Spelman '13, came nearest to complete success, especially in the middle acts. Savery '11, as the Scarecrow, was uneven, but did so well in spots that one may expect a much higher degree of effectiveness in later performances. E. a. C. Layman's face was not meant by nature for that of a Puritan justice; and, in spite of occasional good passages, his mirthful geniality of expression persisted in belying the character he had assumed. Miss Gragg rendered the varying and not entirely convincing moods of the heroine...