Word: treates
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...always been the hallmark of the well-educated, be they wealthy or not to appreciate the good, the true and the beautiful. To treat one's body with respect, because it encases our immortal soul or, if for no other reason than that it better serves our intellectual requirements if kept in in good repair should be common sense to an intelligent person. Yet I observed too many young people at Harvard who looked downright slovenly...
...food, Mr. President?" Reagan answered in a mockreproachful tone, "Now, how could the food be? Delicious. We're in Paris!" At the embassy dinner, the former California Governor told his French guests, "We know France has great appreciation for fine wines. That's why we decided to treat you to some California wine tonight." Mitterrand, carried away by all the camaraderie, addressed Reagan as "mon cher...
...store hardware chain, offers home repair and fix-it advice from "Dr. Wally Barnett," whose role is played by a Channel employee and two assistants. "Dr. Wally" is sometimes mistakenly considered to be a physician, and people call in with questions about how to deliver a baby or treat a sore throat...
...physician charges that her colleagues treat patients as objects...
...overworked and overtired, but few feel that doctors are forced to become insensitive automatons. One exception is Dr. Martha Richardson, who was Harrison's immediate superior in gynecology at Beth Israel. While Richardson objects to Harrison's "imflammatory rhetoric," she to agrees that physicians often learn to treat patients as objects. She also points out, as Harrison does, that patients themselves must rebel against such treatment. Says Richardson: "We need a revolution in medicine, but we also need a revolution in the community...