Word: respected
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...mildly. President of the Institute of Homeopathy is Arthur Whitaker Belting, of Trenton, N. J., and the president-elect is G. Harlan Wells of Elkins, Md. Osteopathy. Another group groping for methods healing to mankind's ailments are the asteopaths. Like the homeopaths they have acquired some current respect because their students for the most part must now get a general medical education. They must know what the regular school knows, except materia medica. For that knowledge of drugs they substitute a thorough knowledge of anatomy and of manipulation, osteopathic therapy. The osteopathic idea is that the body will...
...pain. Perhaps other people were similarly affected by that earnest study of a dissatisfied newspaperman who abandoned his wife and wandered around until he got another man's wife, whose Negro servants laughed to see such sport. If so, here is solace. For with due respect to Critic H. L. ("Hatrack") Mencken and the allegedly significant Chicago school of fiction, young Mr. Hemingway has sat him down and written a not altogether respectful parody of Mr. Anderson's vein. You can just see all the gay young men of Paris laughing over it at those luncheons. One Scripps...
...sociological term in the estimation of trained psychiatrists, although the general practitioner uses it, as do most people. His training has not been sufficiently specialized for him to cope intelligently with the mental abnormalities of the chance patient. The medical schools have been poorly organized in this respect, although the postgraduate student has been able to piece together a body of knowledge on the subject...
That this is to be the case at Harvard one may be certain, if one believes that the administration. In admitting this new branch of mental discipline so establish and maintain high standards that this particular curriculum has the respect of the student body. And one may certainly expect such high standards to prevail. Nor is the study of naval science so near the correspondence variety of pseudo learning as one can imagine...
Zaghlul, no cringing foe of Britain, was reputed to have told Baron Lloyd over the teacups that if he assumed the premiership he would not respect the "four rights"* which Britain reserves to herself in Egypt. The Baron, dandified of mien, direct of tongue, appears to have replied that under the circumstances Zaghlul could not become Premier of Egypt. High tea was ne'er brewed higher...