Word: restrictions
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Owing to the heavy losses of books during the past academic year, the Library Council has adopted certain protective measures to be enforced in the Widener Library building. Those measures in no way restrict the full, freedom of usage hitherto afforded to renders. Hence-forth everyone leaving the building will be required to submit all books, book-bags, brief-cases and the like for inspection. The Library Council earnestly hope that both faculty and students will cooperate with them in carrying out these necessary measures...
Operators' Winning. In return for the "checkoff" and no wage cuts, Col. Inglis, for the operators, got into the new-contract union promises to "take active and affirmative steps to eliminate strikes and shutdowns in violation of this agreement; to eliminate group action designed to restrict output ... to cooperate with the operators for the promotion of efficiency and the production of an improved car of coal." An arbitration committee, composed of the twelve men who negotiated the new contract, was set up to deal with all work and wage disputes under the agreement, to gather facts by experts...
...Restrict the use of injunctions in labor disputes...
...convinced that the detailed college entrance requirements should not operate to hamper or restrict the first three years of the secondary course. The term "exploratory" is not to connote superficiality; the secondary school should be as interested as the college in thoroughness and quality. During the last three years there is especial need for mutual understanding between secondary school and college. In my opinion this is a concern of departmental faculties as much as of headmasters, deans, and chairmen of committees on admission. These closing years of the secondary period should afford opportunity for concentration of the individual's courses...
...contributed severe criticism to the columns of The Yale Daily News. The chief danger which they profess to detect is an undesirable "paternalism" which would force youths of varied origins and interests into an unwelcome intimacy, seriously interfere with the freedom of fraternities and other social organizations and possibly restrict the students to a boarding-house existence of prescribed hours of meals, study and sleep. In other words, it is charged that the proposed system, admittedly designed to help lonely and inconspicuous students, would emasculate the rather heartless competition or "rugged individualism" that now produces "Yale...