Word: treat
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...matter of policy initiate conversation about birth control with the women it served? Of 62 with no objections to birth control, all but five concurred on the second question. The qualifications imposed by these five were directed to "as a matter of policy," stating the doctor should treat each case individually; one woman suggested the service be available only to married women. The possibility of serving unmarried women may not have occurred to most respondents and if it had, more women would have favored separate policies for married and unmarried. The (3 to 1) results are highly encouraging and belie...
...Loeb's stand, they soon fretted over their city's fading image and the threat of more Negro boycotts and street violence. Just before the strike's end last week, King's successor, the Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy, played on their fears by promising to treat Memphis to "the most militant nonviolent steps ever taken...
Americans traditionally treat their four-legged household pets like members of the family. And they feed them accordingly. Today, even table scraps are not good enough-which means that the nation's 3,000 dog-and cat-food makers and marketers contemplate 1968 sales of over $900 million, up $300 million since 1965. At that price, the doggy dish runs all the way from chicken croquettes to chunks of pure beef...
...book about Harvard, Kahn can be expected to treat the University in its own terms, through the words and acts of its own people, with little regard for the University as a social force. He treated David Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank, in the same limited way in a two-part New Yorker profile in 1965. Kahn quoted President Pusey, Rockefeller's banking associates and several statesmen on Rockefeller, and Rockefeller himself on the value of hard work. He did not even approach the question of what it means to be David Rockefeller, billionaire banker...
...Imam's proposal for relocating reading period shrewdly diagnoses the worst tendencies of Harvard's present lecture system. He explains why most sections are so deadly and why lectures are often a drowsy experience. But he fails, I think, to treat his own scheme with the same critical rigor he lets fall on the operating...