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Word: treatment (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...article on Mexico is vividly and tersely written, but aside from being recounted by an eye-witness, differs little from the usual treatment of this subject. The attention of the editors should be called to the erroneous placing among the news notes of the fact that Dartmouth men prefer the "D" to the Phi Beta Kappa...

Author: By H. J. S. ., | Title: Illustrated of Usual Excellence | 5/25/1916 | See Source »

...Foreign and Domestic Commerce at Washington. Dr. Pratt, who is one of the country's foremost authorities in foreign commerce, has the co-operation and endorsement of the leading business men throughout the country in the preparation of this new course, which will afford a thorough and practical treatment of all phases of the subject. In his lecture, Mr. Nussbaum will bring out some of the more interesting facts in regard to foreign trade as a profession...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO SPEAK ON FOREIGN COMMERCE | 5/25/1916 | See Source »

There is a liberal leaven of light editorials dominating those with a more grave tone, the range of subjects sweeping from vendettas to evangelists. Mr. Davis' somewhat scholarly article on "The Study of Contemporary Literature in College" is an intelligent and comprehensive treatment...

Author: By C. E. K. ., | Title: Illustrated is Pictorial Triumph | 5/18/1916 | See Source »

...articles in this number of the magazine fall below the standard of literary style which the Illustrated has set for itself and frequently upheld. From this fault the editorials are happily free as is also the interesting treatise by Mr. Forest Izard '08. The editorials are vivacious in their treatment of topics which are not dead but robustly alive. The comment on "Sophomore English," for instance, contains a good deal of interesting news as well as some sound thought. Mr. Izard's notes on the D. U. Production of "Henry IV" is learned and perhaps necessarily long. But the article...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Illustrated Treats Varied Fields | 3/2/1916 | See Source »

...story is shorter, and laid right here in Cambridge--Memorial clock strikes nine, and the streets are covered with slush, and all that sort of thing--but it is still further away from life as most of us know it. There is a touch of the melodramatic in its treatment of Harvard existence which discourages those of us who have been brought up in the tradition that college men should write college stories. There are so few Flandraus! Mr. Crane chooses a graduate of "L--" College for hero, and though his plot is highly imaginative he succeeds in presenting...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: "Advocate is Doing its Job" | 2/26/1916 | See Source »

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