Word: restricters
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...fair rate of income. There is danger, however, that at the least sign of improvement there will be a general demand for further rate reductions. Lower transportation costs are greatly to be desired in common with lower costs of all commodities, but premature rate reductions which tend to restrict railroad earnings are likely, in the long run, to defeat their purpose, for unless the railroads are permitted sufficient net income not only to meet expenses but to provide credit for financing improvements, they will be unable to bring about the operating economies which are necessary to an ultimate and permanent...
...four tickets, and for all three games the applicant may elect to have the one for his personal occupancy in the cheering section. For the other three games, the application method is simply a means of supplying Harvard men in advance of the public sales, and will not restrict either the number or the "personal use". Students now in the University must make their applications in person at the H. A. A. office and must call for their tickets during the five days preceeding each game. Persons wishing to sit together must file their applications together, but such applications will...
...objectionable language and conduct at the games, of many non-Harvard season ticket holders, has made it necessary to restrict the sale of season tickets for the future to members and ex-members of the University. All Harvard men may buy for their relatives or friends for whose respectable conduct at the games they are willing to vouch, a reasonable number of season tickets, but none will be sold except through Harvard...
...personal feeling is that we must restrict the law profession to those whom we know to have had, in addition to an adequate preparation at college and at a certified law school, a thorough moral grounding. I don't believe this is possible by working out a scheme of an inner and outer bar such as has been proposed by the Carnegie report. In this system, the higher grade of lawyers would be permitted to practice in the inner bar, while those failing to attain this position, either from moral or legal failings, would have to content themselves with...
...facilities, her present population could have a modern standard of living. Nevertheless, if China continues to breed four generations in a century, instead of three, she can scarcely hope to make her resources keep up with her population. The problem is both social and economic; there must be both restriction of population and enlargement of industry. Indeed the problem is fundamentally religious, because she will not restrict her population until she radically modifies her ideas of ancestor worship...