Word: treat
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...summer military camps presented by men who are most directly in touch with affairs of the army will be given undergraduates at the meeting in the Living Room of the Union Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Major-general Leonard Wood, M.D. '84, of the United States Army, will treat the subject in all its important phases, and explain why a large attendance at the summer camps is especially desirable at this time. He will probably set forth the national significance of enlisting college men in such preliminary training...
...Denham sG.S., S. Nesselroth, and A. H. Hutchason; the Francis H. Cummings scholarship to R. W. Blanchard '15; Bayard Cutting fellowship to F. C. Dietz 4G.; Rogers fellowships to A. G. Brodeur 4G., and A. L. Miller '11: Philip H. Sears scholarship to R. Demos; Robert Treat Paine fellowship to H. K. Dennis 1G.; South End House fellowship to W. W. Pangburn 2G.; William Watson Goodwin fellowship to G. R. Owens 1G.; John Tyndale scholarship to E. C. Kemble 2G.; Henry B. Rogers Memorial fellowship to T. H. Procter 1G.; Henry Lee Memorial fellowship to J. Viner 1G.; James Walker...
...many instances, however, assistants --although men of scholarly promise--are appointed rather for their high records than for their ability to instruct. The tendency is to treat assistantships merely as graduate scholarships, given to aid men who are doing research work for higher degrees; and the professor is more concerned with the progress of that research work than with the teaching which the assistant does...
...relations which brought England and Germany into war are closely analagous to those which exist between this country and its neighbors. Nor can we treat South America as a barbarous country, or disregard Mexico. International understanding and sympathy is the only sure road to permanent peace...
...that the day of the old-fashioned Indian was past, Mr. Seton told of the ridiculous efforts of the missionaries who strove to turn the Indians from a religion which they themselves often believed. Mr. Seton ended his lecture by predicting that the Government would in time learn to treat the Indian with proper respect, leaving them their religion, their customs, and their homes. "There are good men in the Indian Bureau, now," he said, "and they are trying to alleviate all the evils...