Word: treating
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...overcome the tendency for "shrillness, and overcharged language" so prevalent among freshmen. He said that to his mind, the prime difficulty which students of this age have is a tendency to "unnecessarily involved and elaborate writing." The aim of the course, he added, was to teach students to "treat difficult problems as lucidly as the problem permits...
...although there is no such committee now, the Faculty should still take action on last Thursday's outburst. The Cambridge police have found a new way to treat students, and unless there is some protest, they will probably continue to apply their latest technique. Even if the Faculty is not disturbed enough to set up a committee on University-Cambridge relations, at least it should make this protest...
Student opinion is essentially as respected as the administration's. President Brukhardt says, "We treat the students as adults, because they're not that...
...only part of the trouble. The foundation found that twelve village families out of every 100 live only on unleavened bread, skim milk and cheese. Fifty-six percent manage to get fresh vegetables once a week. At one village, there is a single doctor who had to treat 27,000 new patients plus 1,100 pregnant women and 5,500 children -a clientele that gave him time only to ask for symptoms and guess at a remedy...
Pirandello may never quite reach his father's stature in his chosen field, but no one can call him a slouch. His paintings now sell for from $300 to $600 apiece, and Rome's art critics treat him with respect. Wrote // Tempo's Virgilio Guzzu "He has a personal impact of his own . . . You may accept or refuse the painter Pirandello . . . but you cannot . . . ignore...