Word: treatment
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Along Addis Ababa's "Mattress Street," brothels used to be marked with red crosses until the International Red Cross complained that too many Ethiopians were wandering into first-aid stations looking for a treat instead of a treatment...
...thing, there is the lingering uncertainty caused by President Kennedy's treatment of the steel industry, coupled with apprehension that his views of business and businessmen are not of the highest. This has caused businesses to consider whether the Administration would take further steps to interfere with wage-price negotiations and thereby affect corporate profits-which have declined from 9.2% of the national income in 1947 to 5.4% last year...
...years ago, Chatô was struck down by a cerebral thrombosis. The stroke left him almost totally paralyzed, and he spent nine months in Manhattan's Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (where Joseph P. Kennedy is now undergoing treatment). Now 70 and back in Sāo Paulo, Chatô still cannot walk, cannot move his right arm, must struggle to move his left arm, and speaks only in hoarse croaks. Worst of all, as he fights to come back, his empire is being torn apart in a savage battle between his two sons and his top executives...
Nothing Negotiable. In attempts to explain the May 14 selloff, Wall Street analysts fell back on a melange of conventional reasons: the unsophisticated investor's fears of the Laos crisis, President Kennedy's treatment of the steel industry, and SEC's much-publicized investigation of Wall Street. The most popular verdict was that the market was "testing" its May 14 low point. If it broke through that low, the analysts solemnly explained, it would go still lower; if it did not, it would probably go higher. "This," gibed New York Times Financial Reporter Burton Crane...
...current censorship bothers Artist Kelly ho more than such treatment bothered him in the past. "There is a lot of fun to be found in politics," says he, "and I always do what I find to be funny at the time." Besides, any man with 612 newspapers on his string can afford to lose a couple now and then-especially since the defectors almost always return to the fold...