Word: treating
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Labor Relations Board last fortnight, which he maintained was a violation of the Freedom of the Press. Before Editor Barclay spoke, a list of newspapers and wire services represented was read off to the businessmen because: "No doubt you will want to get these papers and see how they treat our people." After the Barclay speech the reporters were led out again...
...than in the past. The students will have to pay part and the alumni must help, remembering their embarrassment when, during Lowell's administration, the pittance given the scrubwomen was printed throughout the country. If Harvard is to become a part of the best in American civilization, it should treat its people just as solicitously as it does its knowledge, nor in striving for the intellectual can it let its feet turn to clay...
...resolution. Last year the New York City Federation of Women's Clubs, through a committee headed by Miss Jaffray, sent a petition to Washington demanding that all goods have labels identifying their fibre content both so buyers would not be deceived and so they would know how to treat their purchases. During the FTC's year-long study of the matter, 2,000,000 more women sent petitions seconding the idea. Meanwhile, rayon producers grew worried, presented a voluntary set of rules which they agreed to follow. Since these merely restated the status quo, the FTC promptly rejected...
Says You: "Every 99 women out of a 100 have, or think they have, a bosom problem. . . . Stop thinking of your bosom as an isolated problem. Instead think of it in relation to your general health and well being. . . . An adept masseuse may treat your bosom without causing injury but you might better have spent your time and money on a merry-go-round. . . . Freak diets which cause rapid reduction ravage the bosom. . . . If your breasts are out of fashion today, they may be in fashion tomorrow...
...mental and social handicap. Reported Dorothy A. Millichamp, Dr. Blatz's assistant, who has kept a detailed record of the children's conduct: "The Quints are practically ignorant of life lived by other people, except for rare visits to the hospital kitchen which is a great treat. . . . They were slow to learn bladder control because five commodes on the veranda made going to the toilet a social treat...