Word: protest
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...last year. The team work as it appeared in the practice yesterday is admirable, and from a consideration of the strong individual players of which the team is composed, Harvard's chances of success seem extremely good. The place of Goodridge, who will not play tonight, owing to a protest from Columbia, will be filled by Lovering, a hard, aggressive, but inexperienced player. Owing to this change in the line-up, the three regular forwards have been obliged to shift their positions, thus temporarily decreasing the general efficiency of the team, but not forming a serious obstacle to its future...
...statement of the graduate manager among the preferences, "Graduates' Athletic Association applications, 1362;" followed by "Graduates' applications, 9892." Does this mean that the members of the Graduates' Athletic Association had a preference over other graduates? Two years ago they had such a preference, and there was a general protest. This year the question was raised before the distribution, and it was stated by the CRIMSON, after inquiry, that no such preference would be given. If it has been given, can the graduate manager state what service the Athletic Association has rendered which entitles its members to any special consideration...
...Cutts is eligible to the football teams at Harvard and Yale, by the rules which prevail at both universities. There is no question of professionalism and there has been none. The management has not received a protest from Yale. Mr. Cutts was in intercollegiate athletics three years at Bates, taught mathematics four years at Haverford College Preparatory School, and is now in the second year of the Harvard Law School...
...HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 18.-We know of no official protest. Unless Yale changes her policy there will be none. A meeting of coaches was held tonight but nothing is given out so far. The reports circulated are merely newspaper talk. YALE NEWS...
...with reluctance that I find it necessary to enter in your columns a protest against the present management of the Memorial Dining Association. It must have become apparent, however, to the students eating at Memorial, that at all times this autumn food has "run short," and that this inconvenience has occurred with annoying frequency within the last few days. It happens every day now, that the man who is so unfortunate as to arrive so late as 1.10 for lunch finds everything has "Fun out," and is fed with any scraps his waiter may have the ingenuity to gather...