Word: protest
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...societies in any way, however distant. Of late years, however, a strong sentiment of opposition to 'poppycock' has been steadily developing. Among undergraduates the opposition has grown very quietly. In 1884 it was at its height. The Senior Class in that year held a class-meeting to protest against it. Among the present Senior members of Bones there had grown up during Junior year a strong feeling that 'poppycock' ought to go. Some of them told their intimate friends during the week before they were initiated into the Society that if they could bring it about after their initiation they...
...faculty of Brown have favorably considered the students protest against the withdrawal of the base-ball team from the Intercollegiate League, and will suspend action for the present...
...muckerish" treatment is certainly not to be expected from college men. The Yale nine treated the Harvard team courteously. and it is to be regretted that as much cannot be said of the spectators. The umpiring was simply absurd. The man seemed wholly unfit for his position. Harvard will protest him, and Mr. Fulmer will probably never have an opportunity to umpire another game in the College League. Both teams suffered from his decisions, but Harvard was by far the greater sufferer, His decisions on balls and strikes, and his base decisions were equally bad. Up the last half...
...championship game between the Baby Ansons and Bostons was played on Jarvis yesterday morning before an admiring and enthusiastic audience. The game was played under protest by the Baby Ansons, because of the fact that the Bostons put in Butterworth, a substitute on the Freshman nine to pitch for them. The Baby Ansons were first at the bat and succeeded in piling up eight runs in the first inning, by means of bunched hits and by costly errors of the rattled Bostons. But the latter gradually caught up with their opponents and finally won by a score...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: As the elective pamphlet is soon to be published, it seems a fit time to protest against the insufficient information furnished in regard to the number of hours in the various courses having laboratory work. Neither in the elective pamphlet, nor in the catalogue, nor in many of the special descriptive pamphlets, are the number of hours to be found. The only way to find out is to hunt up the instructor, who, by some natural law that we do not understand, is usually out in such circumstances, especially at the beginning and end of the year...