Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...laws of hospitality are sacred and cannot be broken without an injury to the community in which and for which we live. These laws call for a kind welcome and kind treatment-"nothing but peace and gentle visitation...
...fiction of the number, there is once more noticeable an unfortunate lack of originality. The fault in the Advocate stories is not so much in the treatment of the subject as in the subject treated. The articles, at least in the present number, are very well written. It is only the uninteresting assurance of what is to come, that in a measure spoils the pleasure in following the development of a plot...
...speaking thus, we hope to be in no way misunderstood. Such a method is not advocated for permanent adoption. our position is this: that, under present circumstances, fair treatment of all the members of the student body calls for such arrangements as will accommodate a large number at Memorial during the coming year, and as will make the accommodations not glaringly unequal; but that the present necessity overcome by the prompt action of the corporation, an immediate return should be made to club tables, unalloyed, throughout the hall. If emphasis was to be laid on either of these opinions...
...passing from one piece of fiction to another, the attention is caught by the contrast between Pierre la Rose's "Toy Drama" and the "Solitude" of H. C. Greene. The former is a well told story, interesting through its clever introduction and treatment of persons who are acting from the most common of human impulses. "Solitude," on the other hand, while well told, derives its whole interest from the trials of an individual whom philosophical doubts have thrown out of harmony with the world. The meaning of the story is evasive, and to many who search for it will probably...
...that of other institutions, and, as to the good faith of the University, the liberal protection that the Annex has received in the past, and the unanimous spirit in favor of the change that is expressed by the overseers of the University, ought to be sufficient earnest of fair treatment in the future. There is no objection to the legislature's providing that no degree of A. B. shall be conferred by the Annex without the approval of the University. It is desired that the University may have control over the Annex just so far as it wishes to assume...