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...prevalence of infantile paralysis more than four years ago, or possibly the more recent epidemic of influenza, has the country been menaced with any malady so dangerous to our national health. So critical has the situation become that the United States Public Health Service has been forced to impose stringent sanitary regulations on immigrants; and Italy, by closing her frontiers, has temporarily suspended emigration from Central Europe to the United States...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE TYPHUS DANGER | 2/18/1921 | See Source »

...aviation because of its risks and expense, he explained last night that he believed that these two objections could be obviated. Plans are now under way to make it possible for the Harvard Aeronautical Society to have the use of a plane without great cost; and the adoption of stringent flying rules would do much to lessen the danger...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CABOT SPEAKS AT MEETING OF AERONAUTICAL SOCIETY | 11/28/1919 | See Source »

...judged from the fact that the first restrictions did not appear until fifty years later, when students were forbidden to eat "plumb-cake," what this delicacy may be is not known but the authorities evidently took a dislike to it, for in 1722 we find a more stringent edict: "No provision for Plumb Cake, Roasted, Boyled, or Baked Meates or Pyres of any kind shall be made by any Commencer." They further stipulated that "Distilled Lyquours" were to be seized by tutors. What these gentlemen did with the confiscated property is not told, but an entry in the diary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE DEVELOPMENT OF CLASS DAY | 5/17/1919 | See Source »

...true that none of the men will express any open regret at the disbanding of the S. A. T. C.; to rise, eat, work, and go to bed at the call of the bugle was not a pleasant experience for those unaccustomed to such a stringent routine. As an attempt to combine academic with military work, the S. A. T. C. cannot be adjudged a success; the level of scholarship as shown by the records at the Office has visibly declined. But in spite of all these difficulties, real or imagined, let us hope that the days which have been...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: S. A. T. C. MEMORIES. | 12/20/1918 | See Source »

...throat competition gave way in the late eighties to public control. Since that time concession after concession has been demanded of the railroads until just before our entrance in the war they were scarcely able to make both ends meet. Rates had become so low and restrictions so stringent that all improvements or new investments were impossible. The point had been reached where private industry and even a fair transportation efficiency were incompatible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RAILROAD RATES | 5/28/1918 | See Source »

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