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Word: protested (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

That there will be no Army-Navy football game this year has been definitely announced by Lieut. Commander N. L. Jones, U. S. N., aide to the Secretary of the Navy. This decision was arrived at by Secretary Daniels as a result of the protest made by the Navy against having two games of each year's series played in New York...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Army-Navy Contest Called Off | 10/21/1914 | See Source »

...course would be worth trying. It would hamper their freedom little, and might open the eyes of many. But the world that knows Harvard has grown very nervous in the last few years at the tendency toward paternalism; and there is nothing on earth which would call forth such protest as a manifestation of religious paternalism. Again and again the powers that be have calmed the world's fears of the Freshman Dormitories by disclaiming all intention of restricting their inmates; it is no time for even the most lenient of compulsory chapel requirements to be inaugurated, especially when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE UNWISDOM OF COMPULSORY CHAPEL. | 4/2/1914 | See Source »

...risk of incurring the displeasure of some of your readers, I beg to voice my protest against the participation by students in the summer military camps...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Good Armies Do Not Mean Peace. | 3/9/1914 | See Source »

...will tend, if present indications are reliable, rather to open the course more widely to undergraduates, than to close it, and will also remedy the handicap which has developed with increasing size--lack of individual attention. Many enthusiastic members of Economics 9 who would protest violently against its removal as an undergraduate course or even against a change in its nature toward the theoretical, have felt this handicap and will approve of a modification designed to meet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB. | 2/12/1914 | See Source »

...turns out to be only a clever conversational sketch, strained and obscure in places, but entertaining throughout. Mr. Nathan, in going from drama to verse, leaves sex subjects and gives us poetry of real descriptive power and contageous feeling. Mr. Skinner and Mr. Selders both contribution sensible articles of protest: Mr. Skinner against the misleading rhetoric of those who preach "progress" and care not whether they are progressing; Mr. Seldes against the critical judgments of the Boston Drama League. Altogether, the November number of the Monthly, despite its partial subservience to the literary fads of the moment, is sound literary...

Author: By F. L. Allen ., | Title: CURRENT MONTHLY REVIEW | 10/30/1913 | See Source »

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