Word: treating
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...President to treat Congress with respect and confidence. Leader Barkley, though protesting his continued personal devotion, made that plain in his reply to Mr. Roosevelt's letter. He wrote...
...sense-making was the statement of Palmer Hoyt, recently resigned as domestic chief of OWI: "If we tell the story of Japanese bestiality frankly and boldly, and as a part of each day's news, as I trust we will begin to do, I think the Japanese will treat their captives better. With the war going against them, they will fear to do otherwise...
...advantages of loud, clear medical advice were learned last week by Dr. Frederick William Haskell McKee of Manhattan's Park Ave. He strapped $2,300-worth of radium in three narrow, inch-long tubes to a woman patient's leg (to treat a small cancer) and told her to go to his office rest room. She misunderstood him and went to the hairdressers' instead...
...down to the last lintel and Lederhosen. When he came to the U.S., he flabbergasted David 0. Selznick's representatives by telling them precisely where everything in Manhattan was and how best to get there. And he could scarcely wait to see the police lineup, a treat to which he had been looking forward for years...
...official [Coalition] nominee is to the past, whereas the country is looking to the future. . . . [Lawson] represents the Services, the technicians of this new age and the aspirations of the younger generation for the postwar world." The Times murmured: "It would be foolhardy for supporters of the Coalition to treat the verdict of Skipton as a freak result lacking any wider significance...