Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...well-ordered community." Thus, with a somewhat defensive air, spoke William H. Hamilton, Assistant Vice President of the Guaranty Co., Manhattan, as he returned last week from a tour of Soviet Russia, made in company with Mrs. Hamilton and Mr. & Mrs. W. Averell Harriman. "Everywhere we received excellent treatment-not relatively excellent, but excellent!" said Mr. Hamilton. "Americans are welcomed in Russia and are given every courtesy. . . . The Russians are doing amazing things. . . . "I used to think that the president of the National City Bank and the president of the New York Central Railroad had pretty big jobs...
Dentist Lubliner has been peering into mouths, sometimes fetid ones, for 17 years and has seen many a case of pyorrhea. But, like other dentists, he has not known the cause. Nor does he know yet, although, he said last week, he has developed a treatment which has seemed to cure more than 200 cases. Just what the scientific basis of his treatment is he planned to tell first to the Clinical Society of Unity Hospital, Brooklyn, where he is the attending dentist...
...confirmation from two sources of the charges which he advanced in a recent article in Liberty. George Braden '26, who was on the football squad for three years in college, issued a statement charging that he cancelled his entrance application for Princeton University at the last minute because of treatment which his brother had received at the hands of a Princeton football team. Professor George L. Owen, father of George Owen '23, is the signer of a letter released by Mr. Hubbard in which he offers to appear before a properly authorized committee and "relate in detail my personal impressions...
This promenade is arranged about the Lobby except on the stairway end which is blank. This unpierced wall may, however, be formed in any manner the treatment requires to serve as a memorial to those men and women of the theatrical profession, and there were many of them, who gave their lives for the country, in the Great...
...treatment of the end of the lobby is the subject of this problem. It should be suited to the building and its purpose It is expected to constitute a most exceptional and rare work of art. It may be in any material or form, lighted in any manner desired, except that the Lobby has no light...