Word: equilibriums
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...face against sciosophistic eating. They confirmed the great dietetic discoveries of the recent past. For example, liver.* But the trend was against all fads. Said Dr. Mary Swartz Rose: "The mysteries of vitamins, the specificities of minerals, the inner qualities of proteins, shortcomings of calories, the intricacies of biological equilibrium lend themselves to sciosophical interpretations that sound like gospel to the man on the street; and if they extract a little money from him, so much the better...
...Vagabond has always been a sensitive soul, disliking abrupt contrasts. The annual transition from vacation to college jars his equilibrium, and the divine aflatus is wanting. Besides, when one has to come a week in advance, and dwell in the midst of the desert that is Harvard before registration . . . . The rising splendor of Memorial Chapel, and Eliot House blossoming forth with its new shrubbery, are not enough. The great days are still vivid, and what is to come is yet unsure. The Vagabond greets his clan, and asks their indulgence for another day. Perhaps the spectacle of the incoming Freshmen...
...father, the late great Chang Tso-lin. Japan's occupation of Manchuria has ruined him financially, disgraced him as a soldier, emasculated his ragged army. What the final result of these two resignations will be few dared guess last week. It was obvious that the strange sort of equilibrium by which the Nationalist Government has remained in power for the past four years was broken...
...trading there was came to a halt. Gravely President Whitney announced that Member McKeon had been suspended from the Exchange for one year. The charges were that on April 28 (a day when prices were falling) Member McKeon "made offers to sell securities for the purpose of upsetting the equilibrium of the market and bringing about a condition of demoralization in which prices would not fairly reflect market values, and thereby was guilty of acts inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade." Although the Exchange found Member McKeon's offers had not been accepted, his intentions were sufficient...
...Exchange control . . ." earnestly warned Mr. McGarrah. "forces trade into a kind of straitjacket, leaving little or no room for the play of economic forces . . that normally tend to re-establish equilibrium...