Word: stringently
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...very strange that with threats of rape and racist comments going around here, they choose to pick us, because we want to fight these racist actions," Warren said, adding that Harvard's postering requirements are more stringent than those of any other campus he visits...
...Clark, a vice-president of the card division at American Express, agrees. "For graduating seniors, our application requirements are less stringent than our ordinary standards," he says. Why? Graduating seniors are more likely to find better-paying jobs, and thus are better credit risks...
...well had it kept producing about as much as it had previously. And the IMF does not enter a foreign nation unless the nation is having severe difficulties in meeting its balance-of-payments. By the time the IMF came on the scene with promises of loans under stringent conditions Jamaica was already in economic convulsions. To blame the IMF for Jamaica's downfall is to point to a symptom and not the cause. Furthermore, the IMF has demonstrated worldwide that its help has stabilized economies of all sorts. After all, no country can import more than it exports...
...first game, Eliot House combined stringent defense and six Lowell fumbles to defeat the hapless Bell Boys, 18-0. Running behind an offensive line which looked down at their Mather counterparts, South House backs Rick Gallito and Carl Murillo powered for long gainer after long gainer...
...ports, few were built to standards as strict as those that governed the construction of the Prinsendam. The others were designed to meet earlier, less rigorous safety specifications and are registered in flag-of-convenience countries, such as Liberia and Panama, whose shipping regulations are not as stringent as those of The Netherlands and the U.S. Said a U.S. maritime official: "Their paint is fresh and they look nice, but a lot of them are floating firetraps...