Word: treating
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...time these Halls were projected the question of dividing the college into residential groups was as yet very remote, but quite apart from such an ultimate-object it was felt that to treat the Freshmen in this way had merits which made it eminently worthwhile, and the Halls were built. Now they can also serve the purpose for which they were first conceived, and there is all the more reason why separate halls for the freshmen should be retained. This is contrary to the views of some good friends, who do not appreciate the obstacles to be surmounted in carrying...
...undersigned readers of TIME are interested in the record of Senator David I. Walsh of Massachusetts. Your reviews of various Senators and Congressmen have been most interesting and we will appreciate it if you will treat Mr. Walsh's record and past history in a similar manner...
...Principles of City Planning". H. V. Hubbard '97, Master of City Planning, and director of the school, will have general supervision of the course, which will bring to Cambridge men from all over the country who have done outstanding work in city planning and landscape architecture. Each lecturer will treat some special part of the subject...
Three gatherings will be held, and the meetings are open to members of the Calvert Round Table and a list of guests to whom invitations have already been sent. The first one will discuss vocational adjustment in its relation to religion and race bases. The second will treat of misrepresentation of religious beliefs and practices, and how best to lessen them or effect their elimination. The third table will consider questions of community cooperation and conflict; and to what extent cooperation, ignoring religious divisions fons has proved successful in different communities
...reading pages and insist that the reader must take this meretricious hash, whether he wants to or not. I have already written once before protesting against what I consider an insufferable impertinence on the part of modern publishers, to whom the advertiser is the commanding force and who treat the convenience of the readers with contempt. I recognize, of course, that the income from advertisements is necessary in meeting expenses, but it could be done in a decent way, so that the advertisements would be detachable and the reading matter remain preservable. But this suggestion, I have found, is treated...