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Word: protestable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...wish to protest against the recent destruction of the Yard pump. Such an act is directly against the spirit of manliness at Harvard. It lacks both ingenuity and daring and causes a feeling of disgust against the man and principle involved...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 3/2/1901 | See Source »

...Foss '92 V. of Boston, Dr. E. A. Madden '97 V. of Watertown. After the election a resolution was passed regretting the action which rendered necessary the breaking up of the Veterinary School, and a committee of five was appointed to aid the council in drawing up a protest against the action of the Corporation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Veterinary Alumni Meeting. | 1/11/1901 | See Source »

...negroes to Liberia, restriction to reservations, and the assimilation of the negro with the white race. All these plans he showed to be visionary and impossible of execution. The negroes came to this country at the invitation of the whites, not like the whites themselves in 1492, "against the protest of the leading citizens of the country;" they have come to stay, and the problem of the negro people must be taken up as involving a people that will be a permanent part of the American population...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Washington's Address | 12/18/1900 | See Source »

...cause of honesty, and without partisan motives, we wish to protest against the flagrant misrepresentation by the Harvard Democrat in its issue of last Saturday, October 20, of President Eliot's article in the Outlook of the same date. Courtesy requires that we cast no reflections on the literary and journalistic morality of the editors of the Democrat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 10/24/1900 | See Source »

...should like to protest, through your columns, against the behavior of the crowd toward some of the players in the Bates game. The pointless jeering at men who represent their College and who are working their hardest for the team, is the very height of bad taste. The noise occurred, not in the admission stand, but in the centre of the season ticket section, and consequently must have come, in part at least, from undergraduates. Harvard men have always treated opposing teams with courtesy; why should they now cheapen themselves by making members of their own team the butt...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 10/18/1900 | See Source »

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