Word: treating
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...science courses and the absence of credit for this work were discussed in these columns last November and two remedies were suggested. The proposal that laboratory work be reduced to the amount stated in the catalogue has been declared flatly impossible by the science departments who have continued to treat the situation as an unfortunate but unavoidable evil. The second suggestion, that of adjusting course credits so that this extra work would receive due reward is the only remaining solution and merits the immediate attention of the authorities...
There has been much talk among the large employers, such as Mr. Knudnon, of an unwillingness to force their men into the American Federation of Labor, or to treat with the Federation in collective bargaining. The inference is that company anxious would come to more reasonable terms with the employers, and that they would more justly represent the particular interests of the bargaining group. But it is difficult to see this as anything more than a disingenuous stall for the time necessary to integrate the company unions with the administration. These unions have been, through the course of depression...
...among U. S. prizefighters, spoke of "rabbit punches and backhand blows," complained that the champion should have been disqualified for stepping on his foot. Monster Camera was more polite: "He [Loughran] was fighting a great fight. ... I should have knocked him out but it would have been shameful to treat such a courageous opponent in such fashion...
...recuperating from an operation which his physician thought unique in the annals of medicine. One day in January Dr. Michou sat down in his office chair, leaped up with a 1½-in. piece of hypodermic needle buried in his fundament. Because he could not reach around to treat himself, he called in Dr. George S. Foster who probed in vain. By last fortnight the needle had worked 2½ in. into Dr. Michou's flesh and was approaching his hip-joint. Dr. Foster had an idea. Calling General Electric laboratory officials in Lynn, Mass., he asked them...
...ALTAR IN THE FIELDS-Ludwig Lewisohn-Harper ($2.50). Last week nobody was much excited to learn that Ludwig Lewisohn had written another novel. A humorless and determined individualist, Author Lewisohn has gradually accustomed most U. S. readers to treat his output with restrained respect. A solemn harping on the string of self-expression, An Altar in the Fields tells nothing new about Lewisohn, life or love...