Word: treating
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...like a good hurricane, with its made-to-order suspense ("the eye of the storm is expected to hit land at 9 p.m....") and the opportunity for daredevil theatrics (Dan Rather clinging to a pole in Panama City, Florida, as Hurricane Opal hits). Local weathercasters in the nervous Northeast treat every approaching snowstorm as if it were the coming Armageddon...
...steps voluntarily. Saporito says that will only happen when companies realize that worker-friendly policies can help the profit margin. "Corporations will change when they see other companies getting a return on their investment," Saporito says. "It makes sense to have a loyal and dedicated work force and not treat workers like replaceable parts. As companies discover the payback, they will begin to make changes." feelings of guilt, betrayal, failure, vengefulness?these can also be found in something like 95 percent of all country songs written by people who were never married to Julia Roberts," says TIME's Richard Corliss...
Quite simply, reading period is too long. Because of its length, reading period does not function as it is supposed to: an independant study time for finals. Instead, we're working on papers or actually attending class through the first week of reading period. Many people treat reading period as if only the last week counted--we may as well make it one week long. Since we just ended classes, it's not like fall semester where we need a reintegration time after winter break. No, now the first week is just extra time for angst...
...method of high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has pinpointed exactly where tiny TUMORS OF THE BREAST'S MILK DUCT are located in 95% of the women studied. Using mri, doctors can with greater confidence treat malignancies by removing a small amount of tissue in a lumpectomy, rather than performing a more invasive mastectomy...
...election of Hyman cements his position as true leader of the current student government. In his commitment to student issues and concerns, he exemplifies the better elements of the new council. No more will our student government be a glorified dance committee; the University should no longer treat it as such. Rudenstine, Lewis and the remainder of the administration should work with the council to address the needs of the undergraduate community for which the council's leadership, and Hyman in particular, can now legitimately speak...