Word: threatens
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...avert permanent damage to the heart. By & large, however, the Chicago papers proved only that doctors still have much to learn about the new drug. Where long-term administration of ACTH is necessary, as in cases of arthritis, the dangers inherent in the new drug still seem to threaten any lasting benefits. Doctors could still deplore the first buoyant reports which indicated that ACTH might be a specific remedy for arthritis...
...President Jordan could proclaim that any girl who didn't chant "I shall protect Radcliffe's good, name" for a half-hour every day would be expelled, and he would have a perfect "right" to do so. No contract, no charter, no law forbids such action. Similarly it can threaten Miss Labenow with expulsion for just about any reason it chooses. Or it can insist that its student reporters are reporters only by the permission of the Radcliffe administration, and can force them to retire when, in its opinion, they are not doing a good job. Which...
...resignation last night and appointed John J. Sack '51 to the vacancy. The decision to name a Harvard editor as Radcliffe Bureau Chief, was made, according to the executive board, "to avoid attempts by Radcliffe officials to exercise any censorship over news stories about the Annex; Radcliffe cannot threaten Sack with expulsion...
...living. From a relation of equals to equals, Harvard graduate to Harvard student, it became a relationship between "townies" and the residents of the Gold Coast. A new, later era brought with it battles between the City Council and the University. It saw one group of City legislators threaten to cut Harvard off from Cambridge entirely and another, earlier Council argue over the University's tax exemption...
...armed services will require enormous numbers of men, and the U.S. will have to fill their places on the home front with mechanical men who (being cheaper and more efficient) will keep their jobs after the war is over. The ensuing crisis of unemployment, said Wiener, will threaten the stability of society...