|  |        I don't understand any of this pro-test nonsense.
       
       Of course I'm pro-test!  Without them, how would anyone get any
       grades in school?  You have to have them, or teachers would be out
       of jobs, students would run amok in the streets, and other mean
       and nasty things would happen, too. 
       
       The only reason to be anti-test is to get rid of those dumb 4-day
       cricket matches.  They cause too many medical problems, anyway,
       since people in Australia get bad sunburns on the bottoms of their
       noses from the sun reflecting off their Fosters' tinnies. 
         
       --E. Littella
 | 
|  | Here's one for the note about words that are their own opposites.
Merriam-Webster's _Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary_, 1976, says:
	protest	n	1 : a solemn declaration of opinion and usually of
			dissent: as  A : a sworn declaration that payment
			of a note or bill has been refused and that all
			responsible signers or debtors are liable for
			resulting loss or damage  B : a formal declaration
			of dissent by a member to an act or resolution of
			a legislature; _especially_ : one made by a member
			of the House of Lords  C : a declaration made
			especially before or while paying that a tax is
			illegal and that payment is not voluntary  D : a
			solemn declaration of disapproval  2 : the act of
			protesting; _especially_ : a usually organized
			public demonstration of disapproval  3 A : a
			course of action  B : a gesture of extreme
			disapproval  4 : an objection made to an official
			or a governing body of a sport
	protest	vb	vt  1 : to make solemn declaration or affirmation
			of  2 : to execute or have executed a formal
			protest against  3 : to make a protest against
			4 : to offer objection to in words or acts ~ vi
			1 : to make a protestation  2 : to make or enter
			a protest
Meaning 1 for the transitive verb pretty much opposes the other meanings.
				-- edp
                                              
 |