Word: treates
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Harvard students watching “Dawson’s Creek” last Wednesday got quite a treat when Joey, played by Katie Holmes, jogged on a bridge in Boston over the Charles and down Mass Ave., past Lamont and the Hong Kong. Although her school, Worthington, is an Ivy League university in Boston, it is not supposed to be fair Harvard. Our college has been mentioned explicitly on the show, notably when Joey, Dawson and the gang visited it two seasons ago, and again last season when Andie was admitted there early decision...
...museum along the Charles River. While both sides originally appeared somewhat willing to cooperate and to find a mutually beneficial solution, it is now clear that a significant number of Riverside residents are opposed to any Harvard development on the Mahoney’s Garden Center site. Rather than treat the issue as “Custer’s Last Stand,” as the chair of the Cambridge study committee formed to discuss the museum has described it, residents must work constructively with Harvard to enable the University to expand in as community-friendly a manner...
...speed up the often labored process of drug approval. In August 2000, Cipro, which had demonstrated an anti-anthrax efficacy in tests on monkeys, was rushed through the approval process and dubbed the unequivocal drug of choice in the anthrax battle. It is currently the only drug used to treat inhalational (pulmonary) anthrax...
President George W. Bush has made it very clear that America’s war is not against Islam, and the administration has called on Americans to treat respectfully their fellow-countrymen who have a different religion or skin color. America should take pride in its protection of minorities at home; our tolerance is what separates us from those whom we fight against. But we must also take care to ensure that the antiterrorism campaign does not become, in the hands of undemocratic states, a blank check to repress Muslim minorities abroad...
...obligations to members of our campus community and to the communities in which we reside.” Those words are widely seen as referring to raising the poverty wages that some University employees receive; we hope that Summers can see the need for the wealthy University to treat its workers with the utmost respect and decency. The speech still leaves Summers’ position on the living wage unclear. We hope that when the Harvard Committee on Employment and Contracting Policies currently examining the issue makes its report, Summers will choose a course of action that shows...