Word: expected
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...student's term bill. This fee will be charged whether or not the student takes the examination, and remitted only if he notifies the Assistant Dean in charge of Records, 3 University Hall in writing, at least two weeks before the date of are examination that he does not expect to take...
...gives definite indication of what he intends to do. A conservative tone may enable business to benefit from the world recovery which is underway. A radical toss will at least let them know what he is doing and a definite program will show the country what to expect. His big job Sunday is to restore, confidence by revealing what is in his mind...
...open assembly. Shaking a bony finger at his pet aversion, British Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon, and at M. Barthou, the Free State's de Valera cried: "The whole question of procedure should be properly considered, instead of in hotel rooms. . . . What is it reasonable for Russia to expect? She naturally wants to assure herself before applying for membership that she is not going to have the humiliation of having her application rejected. That is a thing that we can understand, that our peoples can understand, and that we can understand in this Assembly as well as in some...
What the college man will wear this year is a depressing subject to most clothing men. The usual junk, they expect. Any kind of pants and coat, no garters, few hats. For the correctly dressed student, if any, Brooks Brothers, Rogers Peet, and others, show brown slacks and gray coats, or vice versa. Nor are the slacks plain, by any means--brown herringbones, for instance, with a gray coat having a large green plaid and bellows pockets. White shoes, brown hat with black band...
...Dartmouth College opened today, President Hopkins drove home a lesson in educational conservatism taught by a country where one might least expect it--Soviet Russia. Mr. Hopkins was speaking to his students of the great clamor recently heard in America against the disclipinary requirements of our college curricula. Much criticism has been voiced, he said, against all those subjects which call for painstaking study and mastery of exact factual data. The labor of learning foreign languages, for example, has been under fire, on the ground that it is not worth the trouble. The whole system of giving "marks" or grades...