Word: stringently
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Several of the bills now before the Senate Committee on Human Resources would establish national laws to take the place of local regulations, but the local laws would still hold if they were more stringent, Alan Fox, a counsel for the subcommittee that originally considered the bills, said yesterday...
Jean L. Bruneau, professor of Comparative Literature, said another factor causing the application decline among potential applicants may be knowledge of GSAS's stringent admission policy...
Strict guidelines will be laid down to force appliance makers to produce highly efficient irons, hair dryers, refrigerators, electric ranges and the like. In the long run, thriftier appliances will help consumers to offset, at least in part, rising energy costs. Stringent efficiency standards will also be mandated for factory equipment...
...Cambridge City Council, which on MOnday rejected a complex proposal to "go on the record" as opposing the granting of a license to the theater for staging the show, instead passed an order to require stringent checking of age identification at the theater door before each performance...
...Representative James Delaney, any food additive-no matter in what quantities-that causes cancer either in humans or lab animals must be prohibited. The same law may yet be invoked in other bans in the months ahead, though the FDA is clearly not happy with the amendment's stringent clauses. Said an agency spokesman: "There is a need for public debate on the Delaney amendment. The ability to detect health hazards in 1958 was not as advanced as it is today. Congress has to consider whether that law is still appropriate...