Word: protest
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Strictly speaking, the intentions of His Majesty's Government had not been announced to Berlin, but the mildness of Sir John's protest after Herr Hitler re-established conscription in defiance of the Versailles Treaty (TIME, March 25) was notice enough to the Realmleader that Britain would not join France, Russia and Italy in any harsh, concerted effort to make him toe dotted lines on which Germany has signed. Last week in Berlin the French Ambassador was received with studied discourtesy by German Foreign Minister Konstantin von Neurath when he called to protest. On a similar errand...
...quiet on the official front in regard to the Lowell House food protest yesterday. Aldrich Durant '02, business manager of the University, said: "If there is anything wrong with the food, it certainly will be remedied. Four other Houses are served from the same kitchen and have made no complaints." Roy L. Westcott, manager of the Dining Halls, preserved a discreet silence...
Hastily organized was the Committee of Public Utility Executives with headquarters at Washington's Mayflower Hotel. Representing most of the U. S. power business, the Committee issued memoranda and analyses of the proposed legislation, prepared statements, encouraged protest. The American Federation of Utility Investors, which through chain letters has collected nearly 1,000,000 signatures to a petition against Government power projects, opened fire on the latest threat to the interests which it frankly represents...
Quickly the Committee of Public Utility Executives hopped on the fact that while the President might not have been "impressed" by last year's protest to the Securities Exchange Act, it was strenuous public opposition, and nothing else, that made that measure in its final form a workable piece of legislation. Moreover, the President's views by no means jibed with the harsh wording of the Wheeler-Rayburn Bill itself, which President Hugh S. Magill of the American Federation of Utility Investors called "one of the most autocratic and destructive measures ever introduced in Congress...
Fomented by years of discontent among individuals, organized protest against the kind of meals served in the Houses has at long last developed in Lowell. The movement is noteworthy for two reasons. Not only has the Lowell House Committee sponsored the protest, but also it has noted specific grievances. If the Committee's action is to be followed by improvement in meals, all the other Houses must join Lowell. Although some of the individual grievances may vary, they have a similar interest in concerted action...