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

...income of the fellowship which has just been given is to be awarded annually to a French student for study in the University. The donors suggest that the incumbent be nominated from year to year by a committee of French scholars, formed from those who are or who have been French exchange professors at the University, and that to them be added the president of the Autour du Monde Club in Paris...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDED | 3/23/1917 | See Source »

Subcommittees will be appointed by the Graduate Track Committee to look into and suggest improvements in other matters pertaining to the sport...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLAN TRACK CHANGES | 3/22/1917 | See Source »

...Board of Overseers have appointed a committee of visitors for the University dining halls. This board, comprising seven well-known Boston women, will inspect the University kitchens and dining halls. Its function will be not so much to seek unsatisfactory conditions as to suggest improvements. The committee is as follows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Food to Be Inspected | 3/22/1917 | See Source »

...would be derogatory to another of our possible future allies. Well known citizens and respected professors such as Ralph Barton Perry and Albert Bushnell Hart have given quite free rein to their own opinions, though they were definitely pro-ally--and it is right that they should. Do you suggest that they should be "investigated" or silenced? I trust not. If democracy means anything it means a tolerant hearing even for fanatics, and most certainly for those who are endeavoring to be neither pro-German nor pro-ally in these awful times, but simply American. . . . . W. HARRIS CROOK...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Free Speech. | 3/15/1917 | See Source »

Without intending affront to anyone, the Quadrangler would like to suggest to the editors of college newspapers that they devote most of their time at their coming convention at Harvard to find a way to make their journals fit to read. Some of the college papers are eyesores typographically, others read as though they were edited by grammar school students and still others, at best nothing more than glorified bulletin boards, betray a striking lack of initiative on the part of their managers. The influence, for good or evil, which a college newspaper possesses is not always appreciated. What effect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Transcript Suggests Paternalism. | 3/12/1917 | See Source »

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