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Word: treatment (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...SENTENCING Carl D. Offner to a year in prison for allegedly shoving Dean Watson during the seizure of University Hall, Judge Edward M. Viola has again demonstrated that people who commit offenses involving Harvard University must expect biased and vicious treatment in Cambridge's courts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Offner's Sentence | 5/19/1969 | See Source »

...given. Once the students brought its inequities and tension to their attention, the professors were willing if not eager to agree to reforms which would eliminate the grievances--much as the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, once awakened, realized that ROTC does not merit academic credit or any special treatment...

Author: By David N. Hollander, | Title: First Skirmish | 5/12/1969 | See Source »

...Korean War added another chapter to the book. There it was discovered that psychiatric first aid, administered on the spot to battle-shocked soldiers, often quickly restored them to duty. On the other hand, those sent home for protracted institutional treatment responded far more slowly to intensive care. It was almost as if institutionalization itself helped confirm the patient's suspicion that something was terribly wrong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Psychiatry's New Approach: Crisis Intervention | 5/9/1969 | See Source »

...institution, and they can point to some conditional evidence of success. The annual commitment rate to state mental hospitals from San Francisco, for example, has dropped from 2,887 to 119 in the past four years-a decline in which the city's expanding complex of emergency-treatment centers was a major factor. Grady Memorial Hospital, which opened a crisis center in 1968, now treats 5,000 psychiatric emergencies a year. The hospital's 36-bed mental ward, which previously was inadequate to the demand, is seldom full today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Psychiatry's New Approach: Crisis Intervention | 5/9/1969 | See Source »

...absolutely no exposition, begins in fact with a vow to ignore the past and sticks by it. The future is another quantity ignored, and the play between turns out in consequence to be, among other things, smartly constructed. Instead of handing us tiresomely detailed, hideously flawed cases for treatment, Mr. Bloch throws out two empty characters and spends his nine scenes in an effort to make them worth knowing. He has set and filled in the process two hypothetical criteria for the organic play, that it neither begin with a rehash of fetal murmurings nor end on the expressway...

Author: By James Lardner, | Title: Good At It | 5/9/1969 | See Source »

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